^Jhe Weather ■ Showers tonight fair Friday (Details P»,e 2); PONTIAC ONE COLOR Home Edition / VOL. 121 NO Earnings $40 Million Higher Than Record for Period k DETROIT m General Motors made $40 million more in the first quarter of 1963 than in any first quarter in its history. The net of $414.! or $l„45.per share, was. the second best for any quarter, trailing only the final three months of last ] Dollar whisker ord at mark is i quarter of nans. ★ ★ Worldwide car and of 1,512,000 were tl ever. In a statement accompanying the report released last night, Chairman Frederic G. Donner and President John F. Gordon found things bright all around for their vast corporation. They commented only i$ the demand strong for GM cars and trucks, but that It is excellent for GM’* automotive products as well Not a word was said about increased costs, nor was there any speculation as to what the increased price of steel, which came after the quarter ended, might do to car prices in the m Harriman in Moscow JFK See Cold War Issues Balance BALLET HtGH-jlNKS — Dancers Cynthia Gregory and Robert Vickrey posed atop San Francisco’s Golden Gate Bridge yesterday for a photographer tied to a ladder. The jstunt.advertised opening of the San Francisco Ballet. From Our News Wires WASHINGTON - President Kennedy believes that if Russia fails to honor her commitments on Laos, the chances of settling Berlin and other cold war issue: will be drastically, reduced.. While being obviously wary of' discussing the subject, Ken* nedy managed, at his news conference yesterday to dramatize official concern over the threat by Communist forces to destroy the independence and neutrality of the Laotian kingdom.' j meeting with newsmen came shortly after the Pentagon announced it had ordered 3,000 Iroops and some jet planes into Thailand next month for jmaneuv-ers. Communist-threatened Thailand borders Laos. ,, ’ * if ★ ★ .... ■ ■ In an opening statement, Kennedy announced that W. Averell Harriman,, undersecretary of state would (ravel to Moscow today bearing a presidential message to Soviet Premier Khrushchev on the situation in Laos. “WILL KNOW MORE” Kennedy said, “We' will know a good deal more about the prospects” once-Harriman completes his mission. Kennedy said the 14-nation Geneva agreement-last year guaranteeing Laotion independence and neutrality was “a test of whether it is possible for an accord between countries which have serious differences ... to be reached and maintained.” The President said “M we fail in Laos, I would think the prospects for accords on other matters which may be geographically closer to us would be substantiaJIy-Jessened.” - He appeared to be challenging Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev to prove that his professed policy of “peaceful .coexistence” not been abandoned in Southeast. Asia under pressure from Red China. Noting the control exercised by the Soviet Union in Laos as recently as last July, when an East-West agreement was reached at Geneva, Kennedy said the next few weeks should show “whether the Soviets maintain the same degree of control now, whether they desire to maintain their influence, and whether their influence will be thrown in the direction of a maintenance of the Geneva settlement. * , * ★ Russia has refused to join Great Britain — the two countries were cochairmen of the Geneva conference — in an appeal for all sides to observe the 1962 agreement on Laos unless the statement contains a paragraph blaming the United States for the recent outbreak of fighting. Britain has rejected this condition. School Bus Bill OK'd by House Measure Sent Back to Senate for Changes LANSING UR—A bill requiring jxi vaiiaim auu uvciscas wiiuc sales for the first six months of ^ »*** p?% the 1968 model year In the United:^* bus transportation to pick States were the highest for anyjuP parochial and private school two consecutive quarters#! 2,-'Lu^Pas8ed the House an 437,000 cars and trucks. Donner. and Gordon said that first - quarter sales set in Canada and overseas while The first quarter far eclipsed the start of 196S, which at that * time set records for income, dollar sales and earnings per share. The net a year ago was $374 millton, or $1.31 a share, on sales then will go to Gov. George Rom-of.HUK billion. Last year’s fig-ney for his signature. Romney al-ures included a special $28-mil-j ready hah expressed support for lion dividend from Ethyl Corp. | the principle of the bill. General Motors sold its half of< Ethyl last November. 80-24 vote yesterday. But the controversial measure, which originated in the . Senate goes back to that body fdr concurrence in changes iilcorpo-rated in a substitute bi]l. If the Senate agrees to the amended version, the proposal Passes in H^use OK Redisfricting Plan Rain Likely in Area, Says Weatherman Better take raincoats and rubbers along.if on an outing tonight. The weatherman said skies will be cloudy with showers likely. The low wil| be about 40. Fair and mild with temperatures climbing to a high of '64 is Friday’s forecast. Cloudy with gentle showers late in the day is the outlook for Saturday. Morning westerly winds at 10 to 15 miles per hour will become light and variable late tonight and tomorrow. Thirty-four was the lowest temperature reading in downtown Pontiac preceding 8 a.m. The recording at 2 p.m. was 62. Under its provisions, nonpublic school students would be provided with the same bus transportation offered public school pupils. Districts not now furnishing transportation would not be affected. Supporters of the measure argued that parents of children who are sent to parochial or private schools pay the same taxes that are levied on the parents of public school students— and therefore are entitled to the same governmental services., Opponents contended, however, that sending children to non-public schools forfeits the right of LANSING (AP) - A state minimum wage bill today died a final, agonized death in the House when members voted 55-45 to kill a resolution to extend the deadline for passage of bills. (Earlier story, Page B-4. In Today's Press Assassination Civil rights groups will finish mailman’s death walk - PAGE B«5. Discuss** War ^ Foreign correspondent talks about Viet Nam con-flict - PAGE B-2. Area Nows .Astrology .. Bridge Comics .... Editorials Food Section D**» D-4, D-5 Markets ......•••• *4 Obituaries ...... B*8 ,Sports ... D-1JMM5 Mentors, . ««i. MI. TV-Kodio Programs: mmMAW 1 parents to public -school bus transportation because pub lie school education is available to everyone. WASHINGTON W) - The National Catholic Welfare Conference lists 17 states as permitting parochial students to ride public school buses. Maryland follows this policy In some counties, and Montana does so if students pay a fare. A law permitting this practice recently was declared unconstitutional in Alaska. News Flashes ATTALLA, Ala. UR - An arrest has been made in the Hfle slaying of a white into* gratlonlst who was making ar pilgrimage to Mississippi, the Dekalb County sheriff’s office said today. (Earlier story, Page B*5). WASHINGTON r (UPI) - ft* Commerce Department official told Congress today that the steel industry appears to be preparing for a possible strike next month because the corn- producing thili is beini By JIM DYGERT Another congressional reapportionment plan appeared suddenly in the State House of Re-prepentatives yesterday, winning approval in a 57-49 party-line vote. Democrats cried “{ferryman-1 dering” and “Hoganizing” as they fought the new plan in vain; ★ * , * Buj the plan’s division of Oakland COunty into two districts was exactly the same as one of two plans proposed Weeks ago by the Oaklahd County Democratic Party. Hastily drawn, up yesterday by Rep; Henry M. Hogan Jr., R-Bloomfield Township, the plan would put the areas of Troy, Bloomfield, Southfield and Royal Oak (Oakland County’s southeast corner) in a smaller 18th district. The 18th now takes in the entire county and its population now estimated to be more than 700,000. t The rest of the county would join Livingston County in the new 19th Congressional District which Michigan received as. a result of the 1960 census. The House-approved plan, substituted for a Senate-passed bill, was expected to end up in a joint Senate - House Conference Committee to resolve the many differences between the two bills. Hogan, chairman of the House Apportionment Committee, and Sen. Farrell E. Rob- erts, R-Oakland Cetinty, chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee,- will lead the committee’s efforts. Although normal deadline for Conference Committee reports is tomorrow, the deadline may be extended to the June 7 date set for the legislature’s formal adjournment. * a . a . The Senate bill, sponsored by Roberts, would also put Farming-ton Township in the 18th, and put Lapeer and St. Clair counties in the 19th instead of Livingston County. RESOLVE DISPUTE Hogan said today that his latest plan resolve# the dispute among (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) Two Persons Were Killed When This Car Hit a Truck Kennedy Raps Cuba Critics Asks Detractors They Favor War From Our News Wires WASHINGTON - President Lead Fizzles; Four Convicts Still at La Envoy'Carries JFK's Message to Russ Chief Expects Red Leader to Help Bring Peace to Asian Country From Our News Wires . MOSCOW—U. S. Undersecretary of State W. Averell Harriman flew into Moscow today to bid for Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev’s support in keeping the peace in Laos, The U. S. presidential envoy carried a special message from President Kennedy to Khrushchev and also planned talks with Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko. Harriman said he was “hope-, ■i” that agreement could be reached to end the new flare-up of fighting in the southeast Asian kingdom. JACKSON (UPI) - State police saw another lead on the four escaped convicts turn to dust early today after Ohio authorities had informed them that two „nu,uMu.w., — ..oo .ucih of the four convicts who escaped Kennedy has challenged critics of from prison here had been spot-Unties in Laos, Harriman said: his Cuban policy to say whether ted near Alger, Ohio. «j expect to see Chairman they advocate going to war to I state‘police, said the identifica-toppie Fidel Castro. * ’ J *d That’s the question being side- Area Pair Dies in Fiery Collision A fiery crash in Orion Township took the lives of an area man and woman last night. ★ ★ ★ ' . The dead were Identified by the sheriff’s department as Jack A. Fritch, 32, of 47 W. Burdick St., Oxford, and Mrs. Robert J. De-Slover, 40, of 741 Luna Court, Lake Orion. Tlje two were burned beyond recognition after their station wagon slammed Oakland Highway Toll lit *63 43 into the rear of a fully loaded, tandem - trailer gravel truck. Tentative Identi-fic»tIon was made from partially burned papers found in and near the car. Positive Identification made today ords. r through was ;h dental rec- The accident occurred about 11:30 p.m. on M24 just north of Silver Bell Road. The driver of the truck, Billie M. King, 25, of 3876 Greenfield Road, Berkley, told, sheriff’s deputies he was traveling south on M24 at about 20 miles per hour When the accident happened, I noticed a pair of lights In my-rear-view mirror and then Jelt the impact,” King told police. He said the impact knocked his truck ahead. King s a i d he immediately stopped the truck and jumped from the cab to give assistance but the car was already burning. “It burst Into flames immediately,” igitl King., Sheriff’s deputy Jack Davis skid the car was enveloped in flames when he arrived at the scene! ■ “It was impossible to get'near because of the heat,” he said. it it it The Lakd Orion Fire Department arrived a few minutes after Davis and extinguished the blaze. It has not been determined If death was caused by the crash or fire. King told police thqt It was unlikely that the rear tall lights of his truck were off when the collision occurred because he had checked them before leaving Oxford shortly before and they were working properly. Police said the light wires were severed In the crash. The truck suffered no fire damage. Frltch’s body will be at Flum-erfelt Funeral Home In-Lake Orion. ’ Service arrangements for Mrs. DeSiover are being handled) by the Rlchardson-Blrd Funeral Home in Milford. stepped by those who call for a more militant policy against Cuba’s Communist regime, Kennedy told his news conference Wednesday. , And except for going to war, the President declared, “It would seem to me that we have pretty much done all of those things that can be done to demonstrate hostility to the concept of a Soviet satellite in the Caribbean:” Kennedy addressed himself to two recent Republican critics former Vice President Richard M. Nixon and Sen. Kenneth B. Keating of New York — as the Cuban question vied with the tense situation in Laos for preeminence at the conference. CAN’T DO JOB’ . “^Unleashing the exiles cannot do the job" of toppling Prime Minister Castro, Kennedy said in rejecting a proposal put forward last Saturday by Nixon. And Kennedy rejected outright Keating’s contention that Soviet arriving in Cuba, in recent j have about equaled the number withdrawn. “It is our best information that 4,000 or 5,000 have left since January, and that1' there has not been an equal number come In. In fact, much, much less, 300 or 400 at the most.” the President said. These figures have “been gathered by our intelligence sources,’\ Kennedy said, inviting Keating to supply the government with the source of his information for purposes of evaluation. * * * The President said he Is certain neither he nor Keating is I .'hallenging .the other’s good faith I . -a point seconded by Keating in a statement after the conference. But, in it, Keating said: “I stand by my figures. I believe that if. the President will consult his own Intelligence community he will revise his estimates upward." OTHER SUBJECTS On other subjects, Kennedy made these points: ★ * , ★ Canada — He will meet with Canadian Prime Minister Lester, B. Pearson on May 10-11 at Kennedy’s, vacation home in Hyannis Port, Mass., to discuss, “the1 many important questions of common interest” between their countries. • Summit — There are1 no plans for him to meet with Khrushr chev and It did not seem that such a conference “would bo useful, unless we weto In agreement upon a jtest ban, An Ohio highway patrol officer said after the leads had proved to be false that, “It looks like run into a dead wall. There > clues, no information, no nothing.” " LEAVE NO TRACE The fugitives broke out of the maximum security block of the Southern Michigan Prison Tuesday morning and have eluded police and deputies ever since. One report yesterday sent about a hundred sheriffs’ deputies and state police troopers into the South Haven area on a tip by a couple that three “suspicious men" had been seen running into heavy underbrush. That tip. turned to ashes is Asked if he expected to see Khrushchev, to deliver the letter and discuss the outbreak of hos*- Khrushchcv, of course. 1 have no reason to believe t|on the two men checked out , I|uve no lcuauil | even to b limp and missing to# j£|f Mr Khrushchev does not lh-described by one of the witnesses. But as it turned out it was just another false lead. State police said patrons at a b/r hear Alger supposedly spotted James J. Hall, 40, Battle Creek, and Richard E. Mauch, 40, Lansing, and identified the pair from police photographs. tend to carry out the agreement reached on the neutrality of Laos." ★ *1 * The 72-year-old State Depart-lent trouble - shooter arrived, from London aboard a Soviet TU104 jet airliner on his urgent 'save-the-peace” mission. SEES REPORTERS Harriman told reporters at Moscow’s International Airport that Khrushchev had indicated to President Kennedy in Vienna two years ago that he intended to keep neutralist Laos free. 'This is one subject on Which the President and Mr. Khrushchev agreed in Vienna — on the independence and neutrality df Laos,” Harr|man said. Harriman, who had told newspapermen in London tlie United. States would take “no nonsense” from the Communists Ip Laos, said Kennedy was “very anxious” to see that the Laos accord reached in Geneva last summer is carried out. The Soviet Union and Britain (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) “CHILDREN NEED BOOKS” ■- This is the messagW Rochester's'Helen Williams gave the Library Committee of Waterford Township yesterday.* A nationally known expert bn children’^ literature, MrssnWllllflms was guest speaker at a tea sponsored by the group celebrating National Library Week, April 21-27. i ■ 7 A , *• A—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, APRIL ; (J. Russia Almost Helpless Red China Decisive Laos By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign News Analyst At the moment, Laotian neutrally clearly is. in the sell-interest of the Soviet Union. Equally |lVj the Soviet Union does not Shave the decisive lyoice. That voice B^ests with Red I China. As for the | the pressures it NEWSOM can bring to preserve the neutrality of Laos largely are moral hnless it wishes to 'commit U.S. troops. This, it already has demonstrated, it does . not wish to do. It can, as it is going to do and as it did last1, year, put. U. S. troops into neighboring Thailand as a. warning against Communist aggression in that direction. -» And it can, as it has, send Av-J erell Harriman, ope of the archi; tects of Laotian Neutrality; Moscow to remind the Russians that if Communist promises are * not kept in Laos, the 'United States will be most reluctant to conclude other agreements which also depend upon Communist promises. - These include such issues as Berlin and disarmament, both of which are far more important to the Soviet Union than any exchange of real estate in Laos which can only be of benefit to the Red Chinese and not to Moscow. government in 1960 and later (last May, neither Kong Le nor But since the Russians demonstrably cannot control the Red Chinese, it seems unlikely that the Harriman visit to Mos-row can produce little more than additional Soviet bluster seeking to blame the United States for the renewed Southeast Asia tension. ALMOST FULL CIRCLE The flame trees are now in bloom In Vientiane, the back-woods administrative capital of Laos. Sandbars are cropping out in the wide Mekong river and in a year’s time, events in the little kingdom have almost gone full circle. • A year ago the 14-nation Geneva Conference on Laos was struggling toward 'an agreement on Laotian neutrality which even then was recognized as an agreement which would be good only as long as the Communists wanted it so. Militarily the Reds had demonstrated against lacklustre Royal Laotian troops that they could take over the whole of Laos in a matter of days if they wished. ★ ★ ★ And the United States was extricating itself as gracefully as it could from what had proved to be a |300 million mistake. There is one difference, Gen. Kong Le, the former army captain who led a coup d’etat against the right-wing Laotian aligned his forces with the pro-Communist Pathet Lao, now is aligned against them. The Communists had used him but so far/as they were concerned, he long since had become nothing but a figurehead. When the Pathet Lao and their Viet Minh allies from North Vietnam sent Royal Lao forces fleeing across the Thailand border Nikita's Aid Sought in Laos Strife (Continued From Page One) rere cochairmen of the Geneva coneference that set up the coalition government of . neutralist} Premier Souvanifa Phouma and guaranteed the neutrality of that strife-tom nation.’ his forces were permitted to join the action, so little did- the Reds think of him. * A, year ago it had been hoped that by now free elections would be close, at hand for Laos, and its three standing armies reduced and united in one. , The elections are no nearer, and the three armies of Kong Le, the Pathet Lao and the rightwing forces of Gen. Phoh-mi Nosavan still stand. The international Control Commission under Indian- diplomat Avtar Singh continues powerless to enforce either inspection or its decisions. And Thailand, uneasy a year ago, continues uneasy, -with the threat against it 'if anything hanced. Harriman Implicitly denied Soviet charges that the United | States was Responsible for- the Laotion crisis by saying: ‘The U.S.A. has been careful to adhere to the agreement in. both letter and spirit.” HITS PATHET LAO Speaking against a background of crisis worsened by a new outbreak "of fighting last night between Neutralist and pro-Com-munist Pathet Lao forces-•. in Laos, Harriman lashed out at the Pathet Lao forces. ★ ★ ★ Unfortunately,” Harriman declared, ‘‘the Pathet Lao had attacked Premier Souvanna Phouma’s government. It attacked the stability and neutrality of the neutral government which we all support.” Harriman was greeted at the airport by U. S. Ambasador Foy p. Kohler; Embassy Minister Counsellor John Mc8ween-ey; Viktor Karyagin, deputy protocol officer of the Soviet foreign ministry and more than a score of correspondents, Soviet and foreign. Harriman, a former ambassador to Moscow, was ordered here by President Kennedy. Before leaving London, Harriman* told newsmen the United States wants the Soviet leader “to take action to . quiet the situation in Laos and put it back on the rails again.” MOST INSULTING’ Hie said the Communist accusation that the United States is responsible for the flareup in Laos is ‘.‘most insulting and utterly incorrect.” Romney Picks Tax Member Ex*Official of County Named to State Board The Weather mb Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Fair slightly warmer today, high 60. Tonight mostly cloudy with showers, low 40. Friday fair and mild high <4. Southerly winds 10 to 15 miles becoming light and variable late tonight and Friday. ; T.d.jr In Pen tile I.oweat temperature preceding S At S ».m.: Wind velocity. S m.( Direction'. Weeterly. sun wti Thuredsy »t V.tt p.m. Sun rltei Friday at S:SS a.m. Moon iota Thuredsy at 1:13 p.m Moon rlaoy Friday at 7:5* a.m. Domtowa Temperatarea Sees First Photograph She Regains Sight After Sixty Years MIAMI, Fla. (JH‘— Since she was 9 weeks old, Bessie 1 Sixes has been virtually blind. Suddenly, at 60, she has re- I gained her sight. “I think it’s just a freak, a wonderful, amazing 1 freak,” Miss Sikes said. “I don’t know how long It will I last. Maybe a few days. Maybe a year. Maybe forevfer.” g For 60 years her only sight was one per cent vision in I her right eyet She could tell night from day; nothing more., »§ * * * A few minutes after 8 o’clock Sunday morning, still | wearing her nightgown, she walked into the kitchen, drank | a glass of water, and casually rubbed her left eye because | 1 it seemed nfbist. * SUDDENLY SHE SAW Suddenly she saw something — the floor. She fell, to her knees and ran her hands across the J smooth linoleum, streaked green in design. Bessie Sikes had ‘j never seen the color before. She didn’t know whal it was. | 1 ★ • ■•k ★ Trembling with disbelief, she went to the window, and | for the first time in memory she saw a blue sky, tops of two I palm trees; a chimney. Nothing was perfectly distinct, but | she could see. ‘‘A little glimpse of heaven,” she called it. The next morning she was in the office of an ophthal- 1 mologist who had known her for 25 years. “Amazing, amazing,” she quoted him. . ★ ★ ★ Somehow a cataract became dislocated, the doctor said, I and the vision of the eye had not been destroyed. So now 1 she can see through a dislocated lens, which apparently fell I into place. William B. Grabendike, former director of the Oakland County Equalization Department who ‘retired" from that post' last morfth, today was appointed to the State Board of Equalisation by Governor George Romney. Grabendike *of 1587 Yorkshire Road, Birmingham, earlier this year .was involved ip a conflict over how the county department j should be run. Birmingham Area News First Woman Mayor Receives Award BIRMINGHAM - Former Mayor Mrs. Florence R; Willett last night was named recipient of the fired Birmingham Chamber of Commerce award for outstanding citizenship. The department’s director for 10 years; he was due to retire June 1. The conflict-resulted in his “early retirement” March 1, when he was replaced by bis former assistant director Edwin C. -Sage. Currently working for the local department as a “special consultant,” Grabendike, a professional real estate appraiser, was one of three new members appointed to the state board today. it it it The others were Robert Tripp of Lapeer, an insurance dealer, and Mrs., Beulah Fuller of Ann Arbor, a real estate broker. All appointments are subject to Senate confirmation.^ OPERATION CONFLICT In the conflict over county department operations, Grabendike believed the department should continue his policy of building its operation around a staff of professional appraisers. Sage is not an appraiser, Grabendike Said, and considers the department’s function largely a statistical one. The department is under direct supervision of the County Board of Supervisors’ Equalization Committee. The committee, which agreed with Sage, said it “retired" Grabendike to eliminate friction In the department. Delos Hamlin, board of supervisors chairman, said, however, that the -department gained■ a reputation as one of the state’s finest tax assessment equalization offices under Grabendike’ rection. Today’s appointments came as result of a new law expanding the- state board and the expiration of two terms. An inscribed silver bowl was presented to .the city’s first woman mayor by City Commissioner William E!. Roberts at the chamber’s annual dinner meeting; Roberts - noted that the new award will not be made every year, but only when there is a person wqrthy of the recognition. .New chamber directors whose election was an-WILLETT n o u n c e d last night are Harold D- Anderson of Kinney and Behnett; Henry M. Hogan Jr. qf the Bir-i Eccentric and Richard H, Turner of Harold Turner, Inc. ! i★ Their three • year terms will begin May 1. They will reptyce Donald L. Cummings, Henry F. Johnson and Harris O. Machus, board president. Jerome P. Cavanagh, mayor of Detroit, spoke of cooperation between his city and area suburbs during his after-dinner speech. Comprising the metropolitan complex* they share common problems ip today’s urban society, Cavanagh said. Sevehty per cent of the nation’s population now lives in this type of environment, he said. By 1970, the Detroit metropolitan area Is expected to have five million people. The relationship between central city and suburb can not Alabama Jails be bused on isolationism, Cava-nagh warned, although each will have* some problems peculiar to itself. “Water lines don’t stop at city limits,” h6' noted, adding > that public health, fluctuations in the economy and juveni 1 e delinquency also do not recognize political boundaries. ' /■ ★ ★ ^ With “probably the most significant tool given us," Detroit is now engaged in 18 urban renewal projects involving 4,100 acres of industrial, business and residential property. Using’this program as an example, Cavanagh said the ills being fought in Detroit “will one strike Birmingham unless wemre mobilized." ; : t ★ *, ’ it . Approximately 200 persons atr tended the event at Devon Gables, Bloomfield Hills. Hlsheet tamperatur Lowaat tamparatura " tamparatura Hlfhaat tamparatura . Lowaat tamparatura .. Mnan tamparatura .... Weather: Mostly sum Thle Data In »l Veen iy'e Tamparatura Chart 1 81 30 Jaokaonvllle 71 , 41 34 Kanaaa City 03 I B. Franolaeo 07 M Ohew law Temperaturet lapeatM Judges to Get Hike in Pay House Passes Bill; Senate OK Expected Oakland County circuit judges can look forward to a pay raise from their current $23,500 to 826,-000 a year today as a result of action yesterday by the State House of Representatives. ★ ★ ★ The House voted 77-26 to approve a bill raising the state’s contribution to circuit judges’ pay from $12,500 to $15,000. The county pays $11,000 annually as Its share of the judges’ salary. The action came In the form of two amendments added to a Senate bill dealing with Circuit Court bailiffs. Winter Breathes Dying Blasts in Several States By United Press International Stiff northerly winds today sent temperatures skidding toward freezing as far south at the Carolines in what could be the last wintry blast of the season. Rain drenched the Pacific Northwest and the South. Drought - busting thunderstorms moved across Oklahoma yesterday and dumped more than 1% Inches of rain on some areas. Tulsa, suffering through Its driest April in 69 years, recorded its first measurable traee of rain. The board has been increased from five to seven members sr a new law. Thfee are the members of the State Tax Commission and the other four are appoiated by the governor. Yet to be named is a seventh member. Members of the board whose terms have expired are Richard Austin of Detroit and Ned Shum-way of Tekonsha. Winnie Leaves Riviera NICE, France (AP)-Slr Winston Churphill ended a two-week vacation on the Riviera today flew home to London. New District Plan Passed The" other amendment provides two more circuit judges for Wayne County, Increasing the Wayne bench to 20 members. An Identical judicial pay raise was tacked onto a House bill by the Senate Tuesday. * * * The Sdhate is expected to approve Jhe House-amended Senate blU. and discard Its previous action on the pay raise. ' NATIONAL WEATHER—Showers are expected tonight in the Pacific Coast states, in the central Gulf area and from the .Great Lakes region southward through the, Mississippi and ‘Tqnnessee valleys. It will be cooler on the North Atlantic Coast and]!;! party of the upper Mississippi Valley. Army Tested in Berlin BERLIN (UPI) - The-U. S. Army alerted 1,500 members of its Berlin- garrison at 5 a.m. to-.day im a, test of their readiness ' jo defend the divided city. Cost of Living Rises to All-Time Record WASHINGTON (UPI) - The cost of llvjng rose one-tenth of per Cjent to a new record last month despite a drop in food prices, the Labor Department reported today. Arnqld Chase, assistant commissioner of the, Bureau of Labor Statistics, said increases in pHces of used pprs, clothing and certain housing, items offset a drop of four-tenths of 1 per cent in food prices. The increase in the 1 n ennt1 means about 40,000 workers, eluding 30,000 in the' aerospace industry, will receive wage increases bf one cent an hour. In addition about 25,000 other workers will regelve varying In-creases. House Republican^ over “ alignment of the Thumb area and gained the approval of most House GOP members. Hogan’s plan would put Lapeer and St. Clair counties In a Thumb area district that also would include Saginaw County. Hogan’s plan also differs from Roberts’ In regard to the Upper Peninsula, which now has two districts. Both plans would put the UP in one district, but Roberts’ plan also would include the northern tip of the Lower Peninsula in the same district. Hogan’s plan drew fire from Democrats because It would make a Republican district of Wayne bounty’s 14th, which now las a Democratic congressman. “This bill isn’t gerrymandering," said House Minority Leader Joseph Kowalski of Detroit. “You cun call it Hoganlzlng." “It’s Henrymanderlng,” commented another Democrat. ★ ★ it “The Republicans have made a grab for as many Republican Congressmen as possible—even isolating Republican districts in Wayne County," said Democratic Lt. Gov, T. John lesinski. “Today the State Capitol is covered'With shame," Lesinski said. “Lam sure Gov. Romney must be proud of his party. ” CALLED OUTRAGEOUS “The question now Is whether the governor Is going to allow, an outrageous plan such as this to become law,”’ said Democratic Congressman-at-large' Neil Staeb-1 ler in Washington. ★ ★ . ★ This plan is a genuine move I toward minority domination of I the Michigan congressional.dele-1 gation,” Staebler said. Romney said he thought It I better to have a measure passed | with defects than nothing. The bill is expected to .be revised further in the conference committee. Hogan’s new plan has wide I variances of district populations I from the “ideal” of 411,000 per I district. The Upper Peninsula I district would have only “‘305,000. I Republicans say they , want to I end up with districts no more | than 15 per cenffrom the “ideal." it it it Hogan, came up with the new plan instead of a proposal he I had expected to introduce as a I vehicle differing so radically from 11 the Senate plan that it was sure f to go to a conference committee | for further revision. That plan would have split I Oakland County Into the 7th, 18th I and 19th districts, with parts of 1 Macomb County also in the 7th I and 19th. Both Hogan’s latest I plan and the Senate bill would I make Macomb a separate dis-1 trict. ★ A proposal by Rep. Arthur J. I Law, D-Pontiac, that would have | put part Of Detroit'with the I southeast corner of Oakland up I to 14-Mile R»ad in the 18th was | rejected'by the House. TOWTi-FRIBAY-SJtTURMY I SIMMS SPECIAL SEIUH6! | MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) -City police arrested 18 white seg-ll regationists demonstrating in front| I of the State Capitol today shortly I before Atty. Gen. Robert F. Ken-1 nedy arrived for a conference with I Gov. George Wallace. Kennedy arrived at the Capitol j I about 15 minutes after police ar-1 rested the demonstrators. . I A parking lot in front of the I Capitol had been cleared for Ken- jf nedy’s arrival, but instead his c pulled in about 150 feet from tHell Capitol steps on a city street. V As he walked to the Capitol, 11 Kennedy shook hands with spec-1 tators. Riot-trained highway patrolmen, || along with city police, guarded I the Capitol against possible vlo-| lence and watched at first while I jhe white segregationists gathered. I ■ i it it p After they began parading hr I front of the Capitol, Asst. Police I Chief D. H. Lackey, with a loud-1 speaker in his band, ordered the I demonstrators ty disperse because I they had no permit to parade. The marchers, led by retired I Adm. John Crotnmelin, refused to I move. Then Lackey told them, r "'You ere being arrested for vio-1 lating a city ordinance.” . Crotnmelin was not among those I irrested. A Confederate flag flew from I the Capitol dome, where the Ala- r bama state flag normally hangs. I A floral wreath was laid across I the bronze star on the Capitol I steps where Jefferson Davis be- r came president of the ,Confeder-1 acy a century ago. The wreath I was. adorned, with a small Confed-1 eraty flag, ’ ./ The white demonstrators carried I signs Identifying some of them I party. One of the signs said: “Alab will resist with vigah." Sale CARPETS and BUGS I ■■■591 18x21” CARPETS i Value* to $'-00 I Tweeds and tolldt, M Itkid backs, bound edge* | n? Variety of colon. S21x36-lnch CARPETS I Values to $2.98 — I j assorted cor pelt In iriety of colors. Snell She TUFTED «U0* , 59* U I, solid color*, plmh or loop* • • • • — - 00 I Medium Size TUFTED RUBS | I yyQlhnbU. loam or rubb*r bocks, colon ■ - • • * 1 Larg« Size TUFTED RUBS I Washable, ht-lo’s,. pl»»h P|U,»loopl *fc‘ ’ - f 24x48-lnch Size CARPETS 15 I 4j«-F00TTUFTED RUBS 7 Z76 B X7—non-skid, o»»ortod color* .. tlnO-Inch THBOWetRPETS Values' to ts.95—colors and material^ 1 991 E^ieTtoClean and You Qet Extra Wear 100% Nylon Rugs PDoopCutPilo * foam & Rubber Backs Values to 94 rYour {Choice I ♦ForBEDROOM!-UVIMO j ROOMS - BATHROOMS and I TRAFFIC AREAS | V Choice of 14, colors, I I Including whito - • • I v ractangulor, oval, round I shops*, plus contour .to I fit dround bathroom I stools... all with non skid bock*. | IS^-Oz. Weight-1st Quality Boys’ WertsmJesns Buy at SIMMS LOW PRICE PWashable, sanforized non-shrink I f denim jeans in western styling, f Reinforced ot all strain points. Zipper fly, deep pockets. Sizes. 10 to 16. (Husky Sizes.. .,$2.27) I ^ItVd-Oz. DUNGAREES 4 TO Blue dsnlm dungarss* ■ with dMp pockeli, ■ .reinforced itraln points. All »lzs* 29 to 44 lor ■ jen. Irregulars Endicott-Johnson LEATHER UPPERS Men’s Work Shoes In Popular HI*Cut Style 46.95 Value « 'Hsavy duty work *hoss with f Kpr-Solet, air Isothsr uppsrs, Jhmerlcan made by EndleoH^ Johnson. Slid* 610 12. 'MMwmMnUL THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, APRIL ! Dill I. Pickle Picked for Pickle Packers Prize Judge Admires Short Skirts CHICAGO (AP)—The National , Pickle Packers Association has , announced the winner of its “man of the year,award.” OPEN TonHe ’til 9 P.M. FRIDAY & SATURDAY 9 A.M. to 10 P.M. PARK FREE in City Meter Lots Simms Bought Famous MakerY Entire Stock Last Fall For SAVINGS Now TOP-est Qualify Lawn Furniture At MORE Than '/a-OFF! You've boon seeing lawn furniture advertise daily — but you haven't seen this quality at this price — we (irge, beg _ you to see this 'ARISTO-BILT' by Salmoihon - TOP QUALITY FURNITURE I before you buy any lawn furniture; All deluxe features, 1 -inch aluminum !* tubing, firtesf materials in seats and backs, sturdy catches and other “ fine features , , . and the values shown are what these Items sell for nationally advertised catalog. 1C TUIINQ srl^jm Folding Chairs LJSI 1AA AltfLflTL vV ■ /r COMMUTING PROF — Tris-, l tram Coffin, a professor at the * University, of Pennsylvania, al* * teaches at t h e U.S. Military * Academy. He travels 150 miles '! from Philadelphia to West Pitot, N.Y.- each Monday to reach a class in Shakespeare. | Senate Okays j Dem Attorney « LANSING UB — Appointment of Detroit attorney David Leben* :t bom, Democratic member of the J State Board of Canvassers, for another four years was unani-■ mousty confirmed yesterday by r the Senate. * Advise and consent also was given' by a 31-0 vote to 10 other appointments by Gov. George * Romney. ★ ★ * Lebenbom currently is serving as chairman of the bi-partisan * canvass board, which last week ; failed to reach agreement on J certification of the results of the .; April 1 election. The board is in recess, await-; ing action by the State Supreme ' Court on a petition seeking to > nullify the vote on the proposed new state constitution. Lebenhom’s new term expires ; Fpb. 1, 1967. ; Urethane foam can be cast on * various other materials in a continuous sheet by a new process. ■ A wide variety of materials can . be made that are suitable for shoes, handbags, upholstery, pipe . insulation ancrpackaging. MEN! WISHING ENJOYING TO BOND'S and just say “Charge It”... * Choose from 3 convenient ways to pay: 30-Day Account • 90-Day Account 6-Months Account. PONTIAC MALL ■Hr4*^-----u f; >'> tX. ' THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, APRIL 25, 1963 jury Approves Sinking CARTERSVILLE, Gg. (AP) A grand jury has added its sanction to a fpur-lick paddling which the Taylorsville School principal, LeRoy H. Fargason, gave a third grader. ’ . •• ★ i( * The jury returned a no-charge Tuesday to assault charges brought by Mr. and Mrs. Elbert Dean Jr, as a result of the February spanking bf' theii;? son, Steve,'-'9. ; ■■ "V. The principal said .the boy was punished for moving from seat to seat and shoving other children on a moving school bus. ..Since the paddling, ____________ 53, has been re-elected principal. Gets Gold Star Award MOSCOW W—Marshal Semyon Budenny, Bolshevik Calvary hero of the bivil'War that followed the 1917 revolution, yesterday awarded the Soviet Gold Star connection with his~80th birthday. The Gold Star means he is 'hero of the Soviet Union," an award he go t once before, 1J58. He frequently attends Kremlin social functions, his moustache bristling and his chest loaded with medals. Phone FE 4-2511 Shop Mon., Thurs., Fri. & Sot. Nights till 9. Park Froo All Day on City tots FAMOUS SPRINGMAlD SHEETS JMIIKI) 1'KHCU.B • S4X70 with SPRING-ON comers on both muslin and percalo fitted bottom sheets! SPRINGMAlD MUSLINS Reft. 2.19 twin size $J79 .SPRINGMAlD PERCALES Reg. 2.99 . twin size $2i Rag. 2.49 double size.........1.99 Reg. 1.20 pr. cases.........pr. 98c Reg. 2.19 twin fitted bottom .. 1.79 Reg. 2.49 double fitted bottom 1,99 Reg. 3.19 double size.........2.49 Reg. 1.50 pr. cases ....... pr. 1.38 Reg. 2.99 twin fitted bottom .»2.29 Reg. 3.19 double fitted bottom 2.49 Double the fluff with “Extra-Loft" and Ptfap-Loc" stops the pilling! BELLEAIR "SUPREME' RAYON-ACRYLIC BLANKETS Reg. $5.99 2«r’1|) This quality blanket has ''Extra-Loft'' and "Nap-Loc" for a softer, deeper more luxurious ngp. Non-allergenlc, washable, moth-proof In 85% rayon and 15% acrylic. Choice of 8 colors! Imported from Czechoslovakia! OVER-STRIPE LINEN-00TT0N CASUAL TABLECLOTHS R«g. 2.99 52 by 52" R.g. 3.99 52 by 70" *1.99 *239 The ideal tablecloth for picnics, porch table or casual entertaining! 71% linen and 29% cotton in your choice of four colors on natural backgrounds. Note the terrific low prices! Special Purchase Group of Famous MARTEX HARD TOWELS AND WASH 0L0THS 69c-1.89 Hand Towels 39c-69c Wash Cloths 2 for 4 ,#r ^1 First quality;-thick, rich hand towels and wash cloths by famous Martex at exceptional savings. Choose from many colors. Cord Table Sizes. .. Bridge and TEA CLOTH SETS Reg. $4;99 *337 Complete with napkin*! Theia lovely set* come in 40" or 45" square size* for standard or king size card table*. Several baautlful colors, , Belleoir "Celecloud" MATTRESS PADS Reg. 3.99 Twin Flat .............2.97 Reg. 4.99 Full Flat ........... 3.97 Rag. 4.99 Twin Fittad........... .3.97 Rag. 5.99 Full Fittad........... .4.97 Filled with pur* white celecloud flberflll, Sanforized for minimum shrinkage. „ * CHARGE TH^M ON WAITE'S FOURTH FLOOR - FARKRWME Electric Appliances DEMONSTRATED by a Factory Representative Tomorrow Aftomqon and Evening and Saturday Morning and Afternoon in our Lower Level Houseware* Dept. Beautiful new design ... 9 settings! FULLY AUTOMATIC FARBERWARE TOASTER i $j|99 e 9 different settings including reheat position for cold toast * Quiet elevation of toast automatically e Removable crumb tray e Gleaming chyorne; fully guaranteed . * . yyith-riew "Overdrive" switch) AUTOMATIC CAN OPENER $1299 0 Exclusive ,new over-drive switch position for opening all odd-shaped cant • Heavy can stabljizer tray at bottom ‘ • Just salt can on, posh thy switch • With magnet; use on wall or counter Stainless steel... spatter-frde electric SMOKELESS BROILER and ROTISSERIE 188 $39* • Exclusive "coot zone!' broiling—eliminates smoke and spatter • Stainless steel body; aluminum drip tray • 14 adjustable rotisserie setting! • Easy to clean; trouble-free motor *42 OUTDOOR LIVING AND GARDEN SHOP SUPER SPECIALS! 1/5 ffto c#if of Wire Fritting LIVING ROSE FENCE Beautiful and permanent protection, nature's way. Planted IS* to 24* •part, plants glow to 3 to 4 ft. the first year, will grow to 8 It. at maturity. Animals, people, or cars cannot break through, Spring and summer btoo«n«, nd berries in the fall, attract song birds. 10 Whit* Plants *2®’ Giant Flowering Glads ...............50 Bulbs-$2 Fast-Growing Trie of Heaven............3 for 2.49 Dwarf Cherry Bushes....................3 for 2,49 5 Varieties-in-One Apple Tree ............... 5.98 Giant Begonia Bulbs ..................12 for 1.29 Exhibition Dahlias ................. 4 fgr 1.29 Giant Gold Banded Lilias................4 for 1.29 Garden Shop ... Lower level Phone F£ 4-2511 SHOP AND COMPARE! 21" POWER MOWER N» Money Down * Leaf mulchar • Powerful lVi H.P. Briggs b Stratton angina • Siliconized baked enamel deck . • Steel wheels with oil impregnated bearing! • Remote throttle control on handle • I yr. engine warranty Mowers . . . Cower Cave! 5-PC- SET OF SAMSONITE FOLDING FURNITURE ,.. wonderful gift - Mother's Day, Father'* Day, birthday, wedding gift FOUR $7.95 CHAIRS ONE $8.95 TABLE — A $40.75 Valuo-— 6 Sturdy Tubular Steel Furniture • Baked Enamel. Finish (chip- resistant) , • Easy-Clean Vinyl Surface • Exclusive "Slide Locks" (prevent pinched fingers) • Smart Appearance '• Tan or White PHONE FE 4-2511 Waifo's ... Filth floot I, THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, APRIL nun Ending CocktailParties Requires Major Planning & By HAL BOYLE NEW YORk'(AP)—One of life’? little ordeals today is the problem of winding up a cocktail party. Wives like to throw a cocktail party because they-feel , in this way they can pay off all their small social orbli-i gaticns in a single* evening. ' It solinds so simple the way they put it. “We’ll Invite everybody from S until 7:30,” they say. “When they see that on the note, they’ll know we dori’t intend to serve dinner.” Such a blithe attitude only reflects the triumph of feminine - hope over bitter experience. Everything in nature is supposed to have a beginning, a mid-. die, and an end. But a cocktail party defies nature. Once started, it tends to go on forever. , As a matter of fact, it is said that in Greenwich Village seveaal, cocktail parties’ started in the 1920s are still going on merrily. A cocktail party in your oton home starts off deceptively enough. The guests, glass in hand, stand around staring at each other ' with silent mutual dislike. But two hours later they are as chummy as a bucket full of worms. Everybody loves everybody, The faint tinkle of conversation has become a steady roar. The clock’s hands move on past 7:30 to 8, then to 9, then to 10. Hardly anyone has left. Tactful suggestions about going out for dinner fall on deaf ears. The guests prefer to raid the refrigerator. But what can you do to break up a cocktail party? Here are a few time-tested, measures: i l’ You turn off the lights and shout through a megaphone, “You don’t have to go home, folks, but1 yCu can’t stay here." Unfortunately, this hint won’t affect, many guests. They’ll Simply stay on and start smooching in the dark.’ 2. Announce loud add clear: ‘After midnight, the house, will assess a $5 corkage and cover charge.” This doesn’t work too well either. Most guests will either write you-'rubber checks or try to w their credit cards. 3. Paint lipstick dots, ell over your wife’s face and lead her from guest to guest asking, “Do you think she’s come down with the measles—or could it be the bubonic plague?” This tactic should thin out the crowd by about a third. 4. Don’t, wait for the annoyed neighbors to call the police. Phone them yourself. The trouble here is that the police, when they dolbrgte by going to a cocktail partyithey get rid of you? That’s their come, are likely to take off theirjft somebne else’s house. How.willlproblem. coats and join the party. [ Call the fire department and offer the captain $25 if he’ll turn hose on the remaining guests and flush them out the front door. If none of these measures work, you have one final recourse. Pack a bag'at the height of the merriment and leave quietly With your wife on a two-week vacation. When you get back, there may still be half a dozen guests gamely trying to keep the party going. But chances are they’ll be in such a weakened condition that you can throw them out' bodily. Then you and the wife can cele- House Member Asks Support of World Fair Bid LANSING UP) — A resolution’ congratulating a group of citizens for attempting to promote a world’s fair in Detroit in 1972 has been introduced in the House. I The resolution, by Rep. E. D. O’Brien, D-Detroit, noted that Detroit is within one-day’s drive of at least 100 million people in, the United States and Canada who might visit such a fair. Such a fair, the resolution said, would reflect a true picture and image of Detroit and Michigan! to millions of visitors from all parts of the world. I ever 1,000 measured sprays of sunshine In Faberge's fresh-as-a-dafsy Straw Hat-omfztr the set 3.S0 Cologne Extraordinaire with its own dals/d plunger spray... sochfe.,.sogay...so p.s. see sunlit Straw Hat perfume...cologne... bath powder In straw-happy sets and singles ...also new Deodorant Extraordinaire Cosmetics ... Street Floor It's Baby Week at Waite's! Tonight, Friday and Saturday are your last chaacas to git this 2 WAY PAN-L-OVAL 2 different BUST POSES 10" *8 •• out HOST SUUT BOTH OH OKI BEAUTIFUL PICTURE satisfaction Mpwr rn m MONEY BACK PLUS S0t HANDUN0, WRAPPING AINSURANCI * 2 BEAUTIFUL BUST VIGNETTES OP YOUR CHILD, IN A LARGE 10' x 8' 2 WAY PAN-L-OVAL AGE S WEEKS TO 12 YEARS SONNY/ LIMIT I MR CHILD-2 PEN FAMILY YOU WILL CHOOSE FROM A NICE SELECTION OF 3" X 5" SILK FINISHED PHOTOGRAPHS 5 h Wolfe's In/aalr Dopt..,. Second Floor Fashion at a tiny price! Our pleated 2-Pc. Arnel-Cotton Plaid I Styled just right for*the coming season .*; . o,ur Arnel and cotton plaid two-pleca suit. Smart pleated skirt, jewel neckline short '’sleeve jacket. Yours in blue, beige or black; sizes Id to 18 and 14Vi to 22Vi. » Budget Fashions . . . Third Floor Phone FE 4*2511 Winning fashion twosome Water Color Stripe Skirl and Golf Bermuda Tha roll sleeve, Convertible collar shirt-Is.a delicious blending of vivid new pastels woven in satiny stripes on a white ground. White Stag finishes It with a shirt tall hem so you can wear It under or over the trim Sanforized-Plus® Riviera Cloth Golf Bermuda with self-belt, fly frdht, back pleated pocket and two side pockets, Both.ln easy*care, 100% combed cotton, White, blue, gold and red, Strip* Shirt......... $6 Golf Barmuda ......... $7 ALSO: Short Shorts _______ . $4 and $5 Jamaica! ..................... $6 Cldm Diggers ...................$6 Slacks .. $8 Knit Shirts, Cotton Blouses $3 to $6 .Watlo'i Sportswear. . . Third Floor * Very new, very neutraf . . . RAJAH! Very light, very right. • • RAJAH STRAW! 4 Sound interesting? It Is, Rajah Is a straw On Display now Be sure to see It In, try It on for size, for fresh Summar Sold In fine stores coait to coait, exclusive qt Waite's in Pontiac — KEKTFIELD Short Sloovo "Cryttalaira" SPORTS SHIRTS and up! wash and wear shirt In a luxurious bland of 65% Dacron polyester and 35% fine cotton with a modified spread collar. Excellent tailoring seldom seen In shirts at less than $5.00. Choose from solid colors or checks In white, blue, yellow, olive S-M-LrXL ■ Automatic Waih and Wtar Haggar Rayon-Dacron Slacks So comfortable you'll want to live In them, and you can. Just ma-china-wash end machine-dry or drip dry. Llttlo If any pressing. Hold' a crease,' resist wrinkles. Waist sizes 29-42, pm-cuffed, lengths 29-34. Register to Vhft A Free Trip to Two Mol Fine VaKj from Wai MEN'S DEPT. STREET FLOOR THE PONTIAC PRESS 48 West Huron Street ‘Tv THURSDAY, APRIL 25; 1963* HowAiin h. Fitjobuid n Executive Vice Preildent > Business Manager Pontiac, Michigan John A. Riter Becretarr and Advertising Director Circulation Manager H. Russel Holland ' Former Judge H. Russel Holland1, who died this week, was a successful n^an in every way. His years of service as an Oakland County .jurist will ’l on g be remem-| .bered. t He had a well-developed. sense of | fairness and lie [ never allowed any selfish Interest to interfere with what' he thought was Hght, Russ Holland was the sof t of inan who was looked up to because of ills high ideals. ★ ★ ★ !: It can certainly be said that ! ‘Judge Holland, with his Southern I drawl and quick wit, was an asset ! to this community. From the day ; he set foot in Pontiac, his en-; tire life was spent working for ‘ .the betterment of his fellow-man. ♦ • Throughout the years and particularly at retirement he had received $iany formal honors. It was just a few weeks ago that this newspaper ^blogized with respect and affection b|s outstanding qualities. ★ ★ ★ ‘ We are saddened along with his ! njany friends that his retirement ! was cut so short. The “Judge,” as ’/he was still so fondly referred to, spent the afternoon before his ; 'death with his real cronies, the ; Oakland County Bar Association. !; His passing leaves us poorer, but his record and Image should be a permanent inspiration to others. recruiting. They have survived without any apparent stigma. " „ " .< '★ ★ ★ In the long run we feel that/ the NFL will be stronger for this sweeping edict. There was no evident of rigged games, but to insure public confidence, RozElle’s action was the only course open. ;JjFL Commissioner | Made Right Decision ;; There apparently is no doubt that Paul Hornuno and Alex Karras are guilty as charged. They have admitted betting on games. The penalty ieems severe. !; ; If they had engaged in some ! type of gangster conspiracy, that 1 would be one thing. They didn’t. ; In most cases they were betting ; on themselves. ★ ' ★ ★ „ ’•We feel that Pete Rozelle, National Football League (NFL) Com-missioner, had no 'other choice. ; When the moment of truth was Jjnally reached by Rozelle, his decision was that everyone involved had t)j pay—'the fringe transgressor along \|dth those really guilty. Everyone in professional foot-hail, including the owners, coaches and players, knew that betting was forbidden. Most of us will agree that tjjere is nothing essentially immoral about gambling, but its combination with major sports inevitably leads to corruption. ★ ★ ★ •Professional football, like all games, has rules. It is governed by ihll^s. There can be no other way. Whten the rules are broken and the public is aware of it, action is demanded. [ Rozelle and the entire league would be open to criticism if betting were allowed to continue openly. The commissioner ignored the easy way out' by just slapping a few wrists. To insure preventing another ; Black Sox scandal, the accusers - had to be punished. There was no • room for compromise. In a bold • display, pro football has been * handed a tough decision. * Personally, we’re getting a little tjred of all the crying and supposed ipental anguish some of the players gee reportedly suffering. The fact 1$iat these penalties have “branded them” is so much baloney. ' ★ ★ Other fine athletes as well as some Big Ten colleges in our own area j have J suffered suspensions and penalti^p for hanky panky in Levinson Well Qualified to Direct Committee The most powerful committee jof the Oakland County Board of Supervisors once again is under the skillful direction of David Levinson of Birmingham. He has guided the Ways and Means committee for the past four years, and now has been reappointed for 1 another year by Board Chairman Delos Hamlin. In these important times of county growth, a sound man is needed at the cash box. Levinson has done yeoman service at this difficult post, and we are sure Oakland County' will continue to benefit by his acumen. Voice of the People: V(Rationing Subscriber Voices Approval of Press This is an unsolicited testimonial. While on vacation, I had The Press sent to me for two weeks, All it cost was fUO.and I can't remember when I’ve gotten such a bargain. , '■‘■ir. w. if ‘ ■ W ■ '■*' * I didn’t realize how much I get from The Press until 1 was .. without it a few days. I read several ether papers during that time, hot there was no comparison. • jP ■ H ■ fir v The papers arrived faster than airmail letters mailed-the same day, and as much as I enjoyed “getting away,” that news from home was certainly welcome. ‘ Mrs. L. J. B. ‘It Would Appear He’s Headed Toward Us!’ David Lawrence Says: LEVINSON Kennedy Not Satisfied on Cuba The Map, About Town A Rare Sight Local Men Are Impressed by Waiters Using* Heads By HOWARD HELDENBRAND Reminiscing oyer a recent trip to Montego Bay, chaperoned by their wives, D. B. Eames of 43 Cherokee, and Glenn H. Griffin of 106 Ogemaw, had some unusual experiences and saw some unusual sights*—both scenic and human. • • • Number One of the latter category were the head waiters—not the head-waiters (Editor’s note: Take it easy now, son)—at the Bay Roc Hotel. During their two-week stay, a waiter appeared each morning with breakfast for four piled high on a wooden tray atop his head. ... o.....• •---- Moreover, quoth my friends, other , waiters could be seen bicycling to nearby cottages bearing trays in similar fashion, stopping and dismounting with never a hand laid on tray or handle bar. ... A “Look ma, no hands” deal with trays wild. And the MAT’ll never—no, never— be the first to wonder whether the jobs of these unique servitors might have gone to their heads! O O 0 The Messrs. E. and G. added that in talking to the maitre d’ about the startling dexterity of his waiters, he was quite offhand. Said the only time he , had premonition of calamity was when one attempted to carry a. tray by hand. WASHINGTON -r President Kennedy at his latest news conference came close to confessing that his efforts to get the Soviet troops and “equipment” out of Cubq have thus far failed. He was candid and forthright in conceding that the exact number does not matter too much. He confirmed that a few thousandl troops had been! withdrawn, while! a few hundred! others had ar- LAWRENCE rived during the same period. He emphasized that the “equipment’’ and a substantial number of_ troops are still there. ★ ★ * It was significant, moreover, that the President indicated that he is in agreement in principle cause he. has formed a military alliance with the Soviet Union and Soviet troops and equipment still are based on the island, thus constituting a potential threat against the country and other countries in this hemisphere. Many Latin Americans in positions of influence are al-rtady advocating drastic action by the United States. The question that is daily drawn? growing In Importance is how ‘Politician Has Selfish Attitude* Recently I saw one of our prominent politicians on TV. His logic is wrong regarding mental health. No one is being penalized as he stated. Mental illness is a pressing problem that must be solvfed by both local and state agencies working cooperatively. fir fir ★ . He lost an election In a fair fight — now he should give np and recognize his civic responsibilities. He should avoid making irresponsible judgment of public issues to gain personal publicity. ★ fir ★ He had bis chance to serve the people and they were not satisfied with his performance, I am basically a Democrat, but his past performance disgusts me. ! Our first thought should be for those things that will benefit, not the highest for any states, and just of cheap personal notoriety “ “— jhoj at tJa|— for him or any other politician. V. I. ‘D.C. a Paradise for Psychiatrists* I read With Interest the following report given by an editor of a paper in Missouri: “A few weeks ago it was our unpleasant duty to point out to you that Washington is one of , tjbe most crime-ridden, venereal-disease Infected cities on the face of the earth. This week we have to remind you that It Is also the earthly paradise for psychiatrists. “The capital, long a haven for lawyers, lobbyists, and Harvard alumni is now a paradise for pljt chiatrists. “According to the American Psychiatric Association, the district of ColumbUi has more psychiatrists per 100,000 persons than any' of the 50 states. The-, figure is 27.8, almost twice the New York ratio (15.6) which is long Soviet Premier Khrushchev will dilly-dally and show his contempt for the American people. AllttflllftC Will he take a few troops out ( of Cuba every month and send By United Press International some others in? Will he drag Today is Thursday, April /», out the process not just for the 115th day of 1963 with 250 months but for years and pursue more to follow, indefinitely a capricious dis- The moon is approaching its regard of his own promises that first quarter, the Soviet troops will be with- almost 20 times that of Alabama, the lowest ranking state, with Pontiac Press Reader Portraits (Copyright, 1963) Bob Considine Says: IPs Wallto-Watt at Athens Hilton Hotel The morning stars fire Venus and Saturn. * The evening stars are Mercury and Mars. Those born today include the Italian inventor of the wireless, Marconi, in 1874. On this day in history: bn 1848, the first shots of the Mexican War were fired. In 1901, New York became the first state to require license with Sen. Kenneth Keating of a week. So he was understand-New York, one of "his Republican ably impatient as he approached critics, who has been arguing that to® silken ribbon that gently numbers mean less than does the barred his path, continued presence in Cuba of a “Snip, sighed Soviet military base. It could be that Mr. Kennedy was purposely pursuing in part the same argument as some of his critics, because that’s one way of letting Premier Khrushchev know that pressure to get his troops and equipment out of Cuba has not lessened and that ATHENS — Conrad Hilton had of the friendly waving people of P ates on automobiles, and 954 not opened a new hotel for almost the sloping, flower-decked little cars were reK 8tered' town. It’s fi place we keenly missed the moment fresh life surged back into the throttled engines and we rose on our slashing foils again and roared away. To keep our baseball contest entrants posted on how they and their picks are batting, there follows the latest rundown on the American League’s ten leading hitters: Smith, Baltimore Further tabulations will appear from time to time as we approach the May1 10 D—(for Decision) Day. Verbal Orchids to— i Mr. and Mrs, Elwood Simmons of 314 North Perry St.; 64th wedding anniversary. Mrs. Daily Feathersfon of Drayton Plains; 88th birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Warren Day of 54 Chamberlain; 54th wedding anniversary. * Mrs. Charlotte Theobald of 595 Lenox St.; 84th birthday. George Hfiddrlll of Oxford; 90th birthday. Wimmiai Mettney of Rochester; 83rd birthday. . Mrs. Millie Kald of 161 State St.; 89th birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Clinton J. Baqger of North Brandi; 51st wedding anniversary. Mrs. Bessie J. Bush of Holly: 80th birthday. «/ opinion in America is very much aroused over the issue. Sometimes this way of handling the problem can be more effective than formal diplomatic notes Of protest. For the facts are, becoming clearer evfery day—the American people are not going to allow the Cuban problem to be brushed aside, and any American president, regardless of party, would be up against the same demand that something be done to preserve the historic principle of the Monroe Doctrine. ★ fir fir > The United States is committed not only by her own statements of policy, in past decades but by the international agreements with other governments of this hemisphere to see to it that no European power sets up a military base anywhere,in this hemisphere. For such action is a threat to the security and safety of other countries in both North and South America. ESTABLISHED IN ’80 It was not until the latter part of 1960 that Castro’s alliance with the Moscow government was authoritatively established. It Was then that the Eisenhower administration began planning an undercover operation to overthrow him. It wfis this which finally, under President Kennedy, developed into the Bay of Pigs Invasion in April 1961. The * United States decided then to aid the Cuban exiles but not to be a party itself to the'mllltary operation. Looking back on the events of the last two years of the Eisenhower administration, it seems illogical to contend that it would have been easier to Intervene then and get rid of Castro. 1 * ,* *:/ ■ Actually, there is • a stronger t case' today against Castro be- a scissors. The 480-room Athens Hilton was open, 53rd now bearing his name and one of the 12 being opened this year at such assorted water holes along a traveler’s way CONSIDINE as San Francisco and Hong Kong, Rome and Rotterdam, Tokyo and Tehran. h it it The Athens Hilton may best be described as a place where the management provides w a 11-to-wall marble. It comes in all the glorious shades and glittering white that made Greece the loveliest abode in the ancient world. In all, 80,000 square meters of marble from all parts of Greece were lavished on this Americanized pleasure dome In the Middle East. The lobby gulped an entire vein of beige marble found in Salamis Island off which Themlstocleg defeated Xerxes’ fleet 2,443 years ago. Prof. John Moralis’ 118-feet-high ahd 49-fee t-wide semiabstract history of old Greece, which covers one outdoor end of the hotel, is delicately chiseled into 5,783 square feet of ivory-colored Yahnina marble. PLEASANT BLEND The place 4s a pleasant blend of things of incalculable age and gadgetry as alien to this part of' the world as ice water taps in the bathrooms (marbled, of course). The trip here provided us with our first opportunity to establish a beachhead on a Greek Island, of which there/are several thousand. Aboard a big and aptly-named hydrofoil boat, the Express, a hundred or .so of us skimmed to Poros and Hydra at what seemed the speed of sound. Actually, the Italian-made skid-ship makes ^ about 40 knots. * ‘ * * Poros opens the smile* of its colorful water front main street like a friend you haven’t seen for too many years. The ship channel brings you tq within all but reaching distance cars were registered. In 1945, the U.S. First Army and Russian troops joined forces over the Elbe River; In 1945, delegates from 46 countries met at San Francisco to form the United Nations. By JOHN C. METCALFE Now I suppose a lot of us . . . Have endless worries in the mind . . . And rarely in this hectic life . . . A moment of . contentment find ... We seem tp Worry all the day . . . And' sometimes Just as much at night . . About those ’ sundry little things . . . Which in our judgment aren’t right . . . The explanation well might be . . . That as this modern world we face . . . There Is a ceaseless effort made . . . With everything to keep apace . ’. , I really do not understand . . . Why we must always stay abreast . Of all the folks along the street ... Or constantly should show up best ... I think that with more modest goals ... So many worries could be lost . . , And we would lead a better life ... And maybe at one-half the Cost. (Copyright IMS) In Washington: Foreign Aid Role for Investors? By PETER EDSON WASHINGTON (NEA) - Endorsing recommendations of the President’s Committee to Strengthen the Security of the Free World, headed by Gen. Lucius D. Clay, a private research organization here 'has called for greater emphasis on private enterprise in< foreign aid by both giving and receiving nations. Promoting this proposal is the. International Economic Policy Assn., whose| president, N. R. Danielian, Is for-.1, mer head of the EDSON Great Lakes - St. Lawrence River Assn. „ Supporting the new organization are such big companies as Alcoa, Chrysler, Ford International, International Telephone ahd Telegraph, Koppers, Monsanto, Pfizer, Owens-Corning, Owens Illinois and others. Their recommendations, to be made to , Senate and House committees considering next year’s foreign aid program, Include: • Strengthen the Hlcken-looper amendment, which denies U.S. aid to countries expropriating property without compensation. • Extend U.S. investment guarantee programs to more cooperative sources In accordance with the political and economic system of each country, so as to get multiplicity of ume of U.8. exports has been rising, exports of other countries have been rising, too. And U.S. exports as a percentage of world exports have been declining. DA Imports also have been • Reorganize U.S. Agency for International Development —AID—to give private Invest-. ment a greater role. -• Define specifically the / areas in which government-to- / government financing for pub-/ lie enterprises should he limited so that the private sector can be developed more fully. • Encourage all forms of Investment by private, public and These recommendations are based on a finding that there is not enough capital available from all forms of. saving and taxation to meet the demands of the developing countries. It Is concluded that the United States has over-extended itself in trying to meet too much of this demand. About one-third of the U.S. national debt of $898 billion Is attributed to post-World War Q foreign aid programs. , Of this, about $M billion has been In grants and $34 billloii in loans, some of which now are being repaid. From 1950 through 1962 the U.S. balance of payments deficits has totaled $26 billion. Of this, $8 billion has been in U.S. gold exports and |18 billion in liquid liabilities now held by foreign governments — who could demand pay-“ment In gold. While It Is frequently claimed that 80 per cent of the foreign aid dollars are spent lu the United States,, this includes 8 per cent for military ski and 8 per cent for sales of U.S. agricultural surpluses for foreign currencies. A1 s o, the 20 per cent of foreign aid dollars spent abroad add to the balance of payments deficit. Another drain cbmes from the sale of foreign securities in the /United States. Totaling $5.5 bil- , Hon from 1950 through 1961, these 1 flotations were ,$1 billion in 1962 and are running at the samfi rate so far this year. / Sr ★ fir The U.S. foreign trade position also hats been shifting to America’s disadvantage. While the vol- used to be a net exporter of iron and r*"1 — —* even autos, It now imports more than it exports. International Economic Policy Assn, estimates that the U.8. would neod 19 billion Increase In exports to balance its trade position. In summary, the association’s analysis Shows • tremendous change in free world economic patterns. * After World War II, the American aid effort was directed to putting. U.S. dollars in foreign hands for theft* recovery. The process may have been carried too far. It la now necessary to ask Europe, Japan and other countries to pay a larger share of development costs. While direct American private Investments overseas have risen from $11.8 billion In 1960 to $84.7 billion in 1961, there is weed for more. It is believed they can be a source of increased return to the U.S., If proper incentives are given. Of the $3.7 billion earnings from foreign Investments in 1961, $1 billion was ..reinvested abroad and $2.7 billion return®* to the U.S. Th* Ajioeltted ontltled this MwgPMtr •• w*U .si All ap new». ,(AP)—Out| “Some ofour radar operators I on the screen! of a witches-brew of clouds, a gl-1 think they can tell a tornado from House said, gantic elephant trunk dangles a thunderstorm because it shows! This month, , from thp sky.. It IBACKGROUNDI spreads destruc-—gl tiqn wherever its i figure six,” | put to work at the center to, digest , and analyze information. Will be | “It can do in 15" minutes the liest thing in na-lOF THE NEWS] hire. In their ferocity, tornadoes have: driven wooden splinters into an Iron fire hydrant; carried an 83-ton railroad coach;with 117 .passengers 80 feet through the air; split a huge tree, hurled an automobile into the split and closed the opening. The tornado can occur anywhere in the country at any time of the year. It strikes, however, most often in spring and early summer in the central and southern Great Plains. Kansas, and Oklahoma are the more than one-third of does. Add Iowa, Nebraska, sas and Missouri to make a list of seven states having more than half the total number of does. work ,thit now takes 4p! manhours,” says House. “But becauseiji the elements that make up predictions are so unstable, it still will take an experienced forecaster to give the final word. The trouble is that now he knows tharf he jean put to use in time.” : \ ' A tornado causes its destruction one place in less than 30 seconds. Its path can vary from a few yards to nearjy 300 miles. Its rate of travel averages a slow 40 mph, but the, counter-clockwise winds at the center are estimated high as 500 mph. The emphasis is on early warning. A Weather .Bureau alert had been issued for Udall, Kan., on May 25, 1955,when a twister took 80 lives. Through a communications foulup, Udall residents were unaware until if was too late. By contrast, the tornado that struck Ruskin Heights; a Kansas City suburb on May 20, 1957, killed 44 people. Its toll could have been several hours. TRACK PATH a spotter orradar,.television and radio sets in the affected area c r a c k 1 e with announcements tracking its path. The alerts advis^. residents to take shelter in the southwest corner of the house, because debris is thrown to the northeast — the most frequent direction of nado’s route. explode a building by creating a partial vacuum outside. Once a tornado is confirmed, by iCorks fly from bottles and barrels splinter for the same reason—air inside pushing outward. The torr nado’sforce and its lifting/notion are the other causes of major damage. ★ ★ Heavy rain and hail, lightning and. thunder are the tornado’s traveling companions. Hail stones eight inches in diameter have been recorded. Despite the Weather Bureau’s knowledge of tornadoes, House, says, the farmer still knows them more intimately. The reason: “He has seen more-of them.” PENNEY’S ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY end-of-month c Starts Friday 9:30 A. M. One Kansas town, Cogell, had tornadoes oh the same day at the same hour in three successive years* The greatest killer of all swept from Missouri across Illinois and into Indiana on March 18, 1925, taking 689 lives. About 10,000 deaths are attributed to tornadoes over a 50-year period and property losses are incalculable. ACCURATE PREDICTIONS Since 1954, the Severe Local Storm Forecast Center in Kansas City has predicted tornadoes and| severe thunderstorms for the whole country with remarkable accuracy. In operation, it’s a quiet place. Teletype Machines gather hourly data from 300 reporting stations; charts are prepared listing temperature, barometric pressure, wind and humidity. In a darkened room a radar screen sweeps the sky for 250 miles in all directions. It is one of 30 such that together keep most of the country under surveillance. This information is placed before the forecaster, who must rapidly weigh it and issue his report. If & severe thunderstorm is indicated, the center gets in touch with the Weather Bureau in the area and public warnings are issued. “From what we know now,-we have to be suspect of most thunderstorms,” says Donald C. House, meteorologist in charge of the center. “We still don’t know the linkage between the tornado vortex and thunderclouds and we , have no reason to settle on one single cause. “We are* actively attempting to get close enough to find out what it is and we have planes flying out of Oklahoma City through severe thunderstorms.” it h h High-flying U2 planes have been used to take readings, and radar scannings are made at 40,000,18,-000, 100,000 and 5,000 feet every six hours. Marriage licenses eaver, chioaRo. Illinois. - But Detroit. * d r Pr«)l. M Whitfield. Mid Carol ^K‘r,BuW,&0W W. Saginaw, and Leona D.' Weal. N. Saginaw. . Raymond B. HauawoII. Oxford, and Thelma A Hart. Madlion Height*. Earl O. Partloa. Madlion Height*, and mane E. Gardner. Royal Oak. David LT Miner, 12 Downing Court, and P^t^Wl1cU*U».ion, and Mar-’WBSP Height., '"jam** F* SulMvanf' Keego* liarbor, and| Joan J. Stowe, Farmington. Cedi 'M. vifllion, Seymour, Indiana, and mofrgrf C. Pauley, Wailed Lake, and Dorli O, Light, Farmington, Richard 8 Hovl*. Dwight, and Patricia A. Brown, 39B doing. , . ■. Jaok V. Clutter, tt Portage and Joan L. Krnnom’h. 'joiner. BarUtdale, tdiuliiiya Cislom Cabinets D&I CABINET SHOP TWISTER — Nature’s deadliest storms took this awesome form over Dallas, Tex., in 1957, before striking. Tornados can occur all over the country but are most frequent in the ‘Central and southern Great Plains. PENNEY’S ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY LAST 3 DAYS! BOYS’ SIZES 4 TO 16 PROPORTIONED FIT SIZES! TRUE WESTERN STYLING! Leave it to Penney’* to. come up with tremendous savings on hoys’ Foremost jeans . .. now just before school’s out for the summer. Hefty cotton 'denims up to 1.Wm>i.—in proportion-fit sices for slim, regular and husky boys. All western styled .exactly the way he likes ’em ,. . loW on the hip, tight on the leg. Reinforced,at all points on strain, Sanforised^ and machine washable! Hurry! Stock up today! ■ ■ * , 1 PENNEY’SMIRACLEMLLE 90 WOMEN’S SLEEVELESS BLOUSES Pastel colors in easy-care Arnel triacetate .and cotton. Choice of •collar style. Sizes 32.-‘ 38. , $150 BETTER COATS Just reduced to this Igw price. Laminates and textured weaves. Broken sizes 4-12. 6-8 80 BOYS’ SHORT SLEEVE SPORT SHIRTS 100% combed cotton. Sanforized —• big savings, sizes 6-18. too MEN’S SHORT SLEEVE SPORT SHIRTS Button - down styling.. Dacron polyester and c o 11 o n. Plaids' and prints. S-M-L, . 3Fw $5 18 OVERSIZE ROOM SIZE RUGS C u s t d m cut from broadloom carpets, All rayon; 12x17, 12x18, 12x2(5. ’38“ • FOR WOMEN 30 WOMEN'S SHORT COATS Wools, mohalr/Aylon, drlon.iacryliei. ^I| m Sizes 8-18, summer colors............. “ 100 WOMEN'S BETTER DRESSES Big selection of 1 or 2 pc. styles. Cotton r • , knits end dressy fabrics, Junior-mises- m 25 WOMEN'S GOCRUROY SLACKS M ■ 100% Colton, black, blue. Broken sizes. Belt ’ included ............................. 36 WOMEN'S KNIT BLOUSES -ftfl Easy care blend or orloh acrylic/wool. Lt, grey or ’ fill0 pink. Sizes 32-38 ............................. 18 WOMEN'S WOOL SKIRTS Pastel colors In solids or plaids. - Broken sizes ........... , “ 38 WOMEN'S COTTON DRESSES SIR ► Good selection of prints or plaids. 'Misses or half Sizes ■* 50 WOMEN'S WARM SLEEPWEAR ea Cotton knit, flannel or chellis in, pajamas dr gowns.6 * I Broken sizes ■ 60 WOMEN'S BETTER BRAS Group includes some discontinued *150 $A SO styles. Long line, pre-shaped. Broken I ■, ■ # ■ *Jl 39 WOMEN'S JAMAICA SHORTS 40a 1Wash 'n wear solids or plaids in Oan River cottons. I Buy several now, sizes 10-16 ..................... a FOR GIRLS’. INFANTS 14 GIRLS BETTER SUITS 3 styles to choose from, Fine knits in wanted H 40 GIRLS BETTER DRESSES SO S J Dressy fabrics. Pastel colors in solids (1 A prints. 3-6X .......... ............ W 7-1+.. ^ 17 GIRLS' WARM SLEEPWEAR Cotton knit flannel or flannel. 9*1 Ski type, gowns ..................................... I 87 INFANTS' CREEPERS q«0 Toddlers Crawlabouts; All easy wash cotton. Gripper QQ crotch. Broken sizes 12-4 ................... ** , 100 GIRLS' SPRING DRESS HATS CAo Ea All reduced to one lo.w price • • >... VW 100 INFANTS FLUSH TOYS iej|0 , -|50 Large selection of Styles and colors, some All *° I fpam rubber filled. 10", 23" high.......■ FOR BOYS 67 BOYS' LONG SLEEVE SPORTS SHIRTS 100% combed cotton, wash 'n wear. I Broken sizes 4-16 ........................ " 60 JUNIOR BOYS' KNIT POLOS A g $1 100% combed cotton—gay * tor | colorful stripes —. Sizes 4 to 8 .....*..... 30 JUNIOR BOYS' SHIRT/PANT SETS aB8 Knit shirt, belted slacks. 7 /"* Broken sizes 4-8 ................ ............. m 300 Pr. BOYS'WESTERN JEANS j199 Regular Foremost brand — 11 last two days .............................. FOR MEN , ~ 2 MEN'S WINtER TOPCOATS All wool. Sizes 40 regular, 40 long. Ill Hurry in for this buy.......................... 50 YOUNG MEN'S DRESS SLACKS tg) Tapered leg. Rayon/acetate, stripes, Pr. plaids. Sizes 30-36 ............... W 80 MEN'S SWEAT SHIRTS . „ . u 100%'cotton in fashion styling, assorted colors. Broken sizes .......................... * 35 MEN'S DRESS SLACKS j-44 55% acrllan acrylic, 38% rayon, 7% acetate. ', §) Sizes 32-40 ................................... V , 100 MEN'S DRESS SHIRTS a taa While, long sleeves in dacron polyester 7 J 'or 36 MEN'S DRESS SHIRTS *A Slightly counter soiled. Real savings # here. Broken sizes .'.......................... FOR THE HOME ALL ADVANCE PATTERNS REDUCED a*. ' Complete stock repriced to sell last. |J| ■ JCg Hurry and save ...................... IW WW 240 YARDS WASH'N'WEAR COTTONS A ea Sew apd save new. ,36 inches wide. j Yds. *1 • Colorful prints ............................ w ", 280 YARDS DRAPERY FABRICS a3« 100% cotton sailcloth. Scotchgard finish. Yd. 1 Little or no Ironing. 48 Inches wide B , 30 YARDS UPHOLSTERY FABRICS ^ gsgg Brown brocade pattern. 56% rayon, Yd. # • 44% cotton. 54 Inches wide ................. m 30 PR, MATCHSTICK CAFE CURTAINS <122 Natural finish. White, cafe loop top. ' ^ Summarize your home now ;.......... “ 7 PENNEY'S AUTOMATIC C0FFEEMAKERS f JRR )2-cup size,' auto signal light, |fl,**” S PENNEY'S AUTOMATIC GRILL 4 Also suitable for waffles: Snap-out silicone 14^” treated grips. I year guarantee ............ * ■ 90 WOMEN’S SPRING GOATS Big'savings on sol i d wools, wool tweeds, or- ^ Ion acrylics, m o hxi i r nylons, other. Junior^ Misses', half sizes. *12 *15 110 WOMEN’S v SWEATERS Reduced. Giant savings, pick from long or short sleeves. Pen-Ions, orlons, wools, slipovers, cardigans. $2 $2" 18 Y0UNR MEN’S CAREER SUITS Complete with vest. All Wool, smart dark colors, si z is 37-40. Regular, Longs. ’35 60 MEN’S COTTON SLACKS Discontinued colors. Wash 'n' wear treated. Real savings, on this -item. Broken sizes. 2" $5 SAVE! REMNANTS Drastically, reduced af^ types of fbbrics. Ass't lengths. So many uses. Big sewing savings. FERRETS-MIRACLE MILE OPEN MONDAY thru SATURDAY', 9:30 A.M. to 9 P.M. ' ir* jCh rr.rt7 li ~x • THE, PuNTIACi PRjSSS, THURSDAY, APRIL 25, 1963 Senate Approves Limits on Vet Exemptions LANSING (fl> — -The -Senate, stead exemptions would not be heading into the home stretch of its regular 1963 session, cleaned y/up a calendar of 40 bills yesterday including a controversial measure imposing tighter restrictions'on veterans homestead exemptions. ■«. / -* ★ ★ ★ Some revenue experts 'estimat-. ed the bill Would bring in from ! two to three million dollars annually to the state treasury. The measure, with Gov.: George Romney’s backing, passed the Sehate 19-13 amid an exchange of arguments over whether it had the support of. major veterans organizations in the state. allowed for any person owning taxable property worth more than $10,000 Under state equalized valuation! 'It also would exclude any one who earns more than $7,500 a year unless-compensation is received from the Veterans'Administration or the armed forties for service:incurred disabilities. Further" restrictions are placed an widows seeking homestead exemptions. ALLOWED, EXEMPTION The present law allows an exemption on all real estate up to $2,000 for widows of all veterans honorably discharged, whether orj -The bill would restrict the tax exemption to widows of veterans who served during wartime ami were disabled. “I've found no veterans in favor of this bill,’* said Sen. Raymond Dzendzei, D-Detroit. “This is another -step to take away some fringe benefits for Under the bill, veterans home-!not they were disabled! Poles Get Elvis Records WARSAW (UPI-> - ,Poland’s trade with Guba has expanded to include — besides sugar, pineapples and,, cigars — long-playing Elvis Presley records. The recordings now on sale in Warsaw carry “made in Cuba’ labels and sell for about $4.80 at I the tourist rate of exchange. service performed for oyr country.” , ‘ ■ , ~ Dzendzei found an ally in Sen. John Smeekens, R-Coldwater, who read into the,record a letter opposing the bill from the state commander of the Veterans of Foreign Wats. ‘ But Sen. Frank Beadle, R-St. Clair, said that veteranSof-, flcials have began to realize that tax exemptions Jor veterans under the Homestead Act are expanding .to the point where they might be cut back even more if there is further delay in passing restrictive legislation. Beadle, who said he-could not [estimate the approximate tax revenue to be gained by the stafe, declared that some veterans realize that they can afford to pay property taxes as well as pop-veterans. OUTGROWS INTENTION Sen. Kent Lundgren, R-Menom-, inee, agreed that the program had outgrown its original intention and that exemptions are now being claimed by' some whose homes are worth as much as $20,000. ‘We should have taken care of this long ago,” Lundgren Wisconsin Okays Vote on Parochial Bus Bill MADISON, Wis. (UPIj *- The Wisconsin assembly passed a solution yesterday calling for a referendum on whether parochial students may ride public school buses. The same proposal was rejected in a statewide vote in 1946. tined.to be applied to a program for aid to crippled children. But the planned $2-million Increase in the program was reduced sharply by the House Ways and Means Committee. Democratic Ben. Garland Lane of Flint disagreed and said that the commanders and legislative chairmen of veterans organizations had “sold out” the rank-and-file members of their groups. ★ * ★ Romney said several weeks ago that he was supporting the proposal and that it had the backing of most veterans officials. Originally, the additional money in tax revenue had been des- Supervisor's Problem Winds Up in His Lap VENTURA, Calif. (UP!) • County Supervisor Fred Ireland had a problem yesterday most men would like. He wrote a polite -note to the board saying he thought his new office was fine. “But I don’t have any furniture, so my secretary has to sit on my lap;” The board -got the hint and ordered the furniture. Ailing Hero Soldier 'Progressing Well' NASHVILLE, Tenn. (UPI) -Ailing World War I hero Sgt. Alvin York is “progressing very Well” at St. Thomas Hospital today. ' ' -" It ★ ★ York, suffering a blood clot In the left lung and a kidney infection, may be able to return home in about a week If his condition eontinhes to- Improve, a hospital spokesman The medal of honor winner “is more relaxed and comfortable than he has been since he got here,” the spokesman safiL York, 75, was hospitalizd nearly two weeks ago. Famous Lauionl Powerful 2Va-hp. 4-eyde engine, safety lock blade, staggered wheels for close .trim. Cuts 19" swath. Save time, moneyl YOUR BEDROOM'S A BOWER OF ROSES 4.99 roso-print pillow. ... 3" Fortrel * polyester filled; percale cotton. Rosy Pepperell blanket.. 4" Big 72x90". Match Pepperell sheets. Sheets at rosy savings ... £59 Save 40c! Lady Pepperell 72x108" or twin fitted muslin cotton. 4 colors. IUf. 1.29 61x101" or full fitted 2.99 Cese .... 79, */?(•#. T.M. Celintte Cotp. Embossed cotton spread is pretty as freshly-picked rose bouquet Carefree to wash, lively JM QQ to look atl Pink, lilac or MwYrw yellow roses, full ruffled flounce. Nlcel ■ Matching drapes..4.99 pr. Shams.. 1,99 ea. Flowers bloom on quilted taffeta luxury spread with solid ruffle £99 Rich rayon taffeta with floral-printed ..quilted top, . contrasting flouncl. Blue, , lilac, rose, brown. Matching drapes....5.99 pr. Shams.......2.99ea. SALE: hand-crafted rugs in prettl-point designs 199 Hooked and tufted' rugs in luxurious wool/rayon, subtle eolors. Oval, oblong. Snowy ruffled Cape Cods at this low sale price 44 Everglaze® cotton curtains machine-wash, drip dry, keep new' looking. Save) / 4M30" ........ 1.64 f/i 44x34" ...... 1.84 pr. 44x45" ...... 2.49 pr. 1 . 2.79 pr. 2.99 pr. 1.19 184 SALE! S-T-R-E-T-C-H TO FIT KN'lf ■ FIT-ALL COVERS Custom-look fit for all your furniture! Catton--rayon knit In rich brown, geld, green. Get yours 7.99 iota cover fo match.........5.81 88 Deluxe cotton-nylon knit strotefi-to-fit-all covers Chair cover to fit most styles. 4 colors 5.99 Matching sofa cover....................11,99 Curved center sectional ...........,,...9.99 Right or left arm sectional.............9,99 Furniture covert Downtown Store Only. OPEN EVERY NICHT TO 9 Monday through Saturday mimmmiKfmmrm * / DOWNTOWN AND 1 DRAYTON PLAINS , ; ‘‘ : [, - v ■ , ' ■ v' -> ‘ 7 ' , , ' - v*' v ' 7 -V 0P1N IVIRY NIGHT TO 9 ' r Monday through Saturday SALE Shadow-panol | slips, gowns and potticoats 'CHARGE IT' Gowni, shadow-panel slips and petticoats In cool, care-free cotton—at a low price that makes it taiy to (toy flpwer-frosh all sum-merl Sizes S-M-L, 32-40, 42-46 In this fabulous sale-priced group. SPRING'S 'LOVABLE' LOOK Smooth, youthful flrmnsss with gsntlo foam contouring •• Sweet Addallne foam padding 0% QQ bra, fits superbly. Easy uplift, tool 32 to 36A, 32 to 38B. b- Interplay bra, jersey lined eg 50 stitched foam cups. Curved band I for separation. 32-36 A, I. ,v ' ® ‘ c. LacO and foam with the lovable *g 50 look to make you feel young, . I beautiful! 32-56A, 32 38B. B Let Federal's expertly trained corsetieres fit you correctly for comfort and figure flattery. DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTOhj PLAINS "WHIPPED CREAM" Frothy, feminine pullover partners in pastel prints 12” 14" .FREE ALTERATIONS SALE i Coat sale-save 6.11! | Fine wools, '63 styles I 18“ FREE ALTERATIONS Marvelous! Reg. 24.99 dutch, | cardigan and flared styles— | brand new from neckline to hem! | Elegant white, bon-bon pastels, beige. Misses' sizes in group. SALE Perky cotton daytimers, sizes for all, were 3.99 You've never seen so many styles, such pretty patterns in lovely first quality dresses, priced low enough so you can add several to your wardrolpel Sheaths and shirtwaists in prints, checks, plaids and patterns, woven in so wash* ing won't affect the crisp new look. Sizes, styles, savings for everyone! 7-15, 12-20, 14Vi-24V^i, 46-52 in the group. Shop Federal's, save! Pastel floral patterns burst across a a snow white background pullover top, V-necked for special flattery! Solid white. Pleated skirt. Sizes 8 to 16- 1299 Ferns and roses ramble over a sleeveless, jewel neck pullover top, tiny pleated skirt. Looks like a million dollars. Whipped cream fabric. 7-13. 14*9 SALE Reg. 1.99 Jamaicas, surfers and Tee-tops 44 CHARGE IT' What a valuel Just in time for Sun and Funs jamaicas, surfers, tops. Team them up In a 1 dozen different combinations for a bright new outfit every day of the week. Shorts and surfers are self belted in Black and colors. 12-18. Colorful knit Hops, sizes S-M-L. Stock up, save. Famous maker shirts in solids or prints. Worth more! 30-36. 1.39 THE JPQNTTAC PRESS, THURSDAY, APRIL 25, 1963 Khrushchev Rebuffs Western Attempt to Reopen N-Ban Talks By JOH NM. HIGHTOWER Macmillan's hopes that progress WASHINGTON (AP)*— Soviet I in test ban negotiations could lead Premier Khrushchev apparently to an early East-West sumrriU has rebuff a bid by'President meeting, The, approach to Khrushchev • was made jointly by Macmillan and Kennedy' through U.S. Am-' bassador, Foy D. Kohler and the pi British envoy in Moscow, Sir Humphrey Trevelyan. They held a 90-minute meeting with the Soviet leader and reportedly gave I him a joint letter from Kennedy and Macmillan. / , ' Kennedy and Britl*rn Prime Minister Harold Macmillan to try to break the nuclear test ban deadlock by a new rou id of high level negotiations. Khrushchev’ reaction at a HIGHTOWER | The meeting took place several Kremlin meeting Wednesday also j hours before President Kennedy's | evidently dealt a sharp blow foliate afternoon press conference, and it is understood that Kennedy had received a preliminary report from Kohler when he discussed the outlook for test ban negotiations with reporters. He carefully avoided any reference to Khrushchev’s reactioh, but the tone of what he did say indicated discouragement. 'I am not overly sanguine about the prospects for an accord,” he said. f TERSE REPLY* When he was asked later about the prospects for a meeting between himself and Khrushchev, he replied tersely: "No, I haven’t heard any,, and there is none planned.’’*-* A detailed account of the ambassadors’ conference with the Soviet leader reached the State Department and the White House much later. - Officials reportedly were conceited with any evidence it might contain of a developing hard line toward the West on the part of the • Soviet government and Khrushchev personally. Evidence of the emergence of such a line was found here Monday in Soviet publication of an attack on U.S. policy toward Laos, blaming the 'United States for the recent out- break of fighting there. What Kennedy $nd Macmillan reportedly proposed to Khrushchev was that an effective way to tackle the deadlock in the current negotiations at Geneva would be to throw the whole problem Into higher level meeting. Both London and Washington officials had speculated that , if Khrushchev responded favorably W East-West foreign ministers conference would be set up to go into the differences which still bldck agreement. ■ , - ★ ★ - ★ The best known of these differences is over , the Inumber of. on- site inspections which would he permitted annually .on Soviet territory and reciprocally on U.S. and British territory to make We that a test ban was not being violated. '. Road Safety Problem of . Stater^Romney LANSING (UPD-Gov. George Romney said yesterday traffic safety is essentially an individual problem, but local and state governments also bear some of the burden of accident prevention. WWW The Chief executive told the Michigan Safety Conference he was hopeful that future imple-. mentation of the new constitution "will strengthen the role of government in traffic safety” through the consolidation and reorganization of agencies now dealing with the problem. Noting an increase of 18 per cent in the traffic deaths this year over the 1962 toll at this time, Romney said the state had several goals to accomplish in the field of traffic safety. He cited these as improved quality of high school driver education; increased information on the causes of accidents; raised standards of driver licensing and examination; increased use of driver clinics for habitual violators; expanded research in traffic safety; and increased use of driver information files. Erhard Warns of Inflation BONN, Germany (IfI — • Vice Chancellor Ludwig Erhard took the floor in parliament yesterday for the first tiine since he was nominated to succeed Chancellor Konrad Adenauer add warned against creeping inflation in West Germany. Erhard has guided the West German economy f< than 13 years and is generally credited with its present prosperity. He said spending, especially by the government, is increasing faster than production. Be urged that supply and demand be brought into greater harmony. it it ir ."Inflation feeds on inflation,” he told the house. Minnesota Takes Action on Sunday Sales Bill ST. PAUL, Minn. (UPt)-The Minnesota legislature completed action yesterday on a bill which' prohibits large retail store sales on Sunday. The bill; which contains a Saturday option, would permit the sale of sporting equipment op Sunday near the place it is to be used. For Research Depth Tells State Requirements DETROIT (AP) — Michigan has the three basic requirements needed to give it depth in research capability, James T. Wilson, acting director of the University of Michigan Institute of Science and Technology! s a i d yesterday. Wilson, speaking at the annual meeting of. the American Ordinance Association’s combat and tactical Vehicle division, added: “I think there is a dear and rising tide in our faVor and we should take full advantage of U. Should we miss it, suck a tide is not likely to rise again." The three requirements, he said, are: ‘Great universities competent -/ywttmrta c c (UPIt - The!in most- if not «H, the presently -^OLUMBIA Sjl (UP- The . ^ f ufJc fie,dS), and president o cle^"oC°llege yes- in at least , few terday praised Harvey Gantt —I 6 the first Negro accepted in South' Carolina’s vtfiite Schools — as , * * * an excellent student. •"Participation in the glamor- He hasn’t missed a class and ous, sophisticated research re-Presi- lated to and supported by our Clemson President Praises First Negro is passing in everything,” dent R. C. Edwards said. * ★ + There is no harder working student at, Clemson College than Gantt. He has not attempted to inject himself in any white social activities, but has paid strictly good attention to his work.” military and space establishments. • “Industrial research organizations related to healthy manufacturing establishments producing both civilian and governmental consumer goods.” Canada Leader Plans Patch Job on Visit to JFK t, OTTAWA, Ont. (AP) - Prime Minister Lester B. Pearson plans a patch-things-up meeting in about two weeks with President Kenner dy. » The get-together will take place somewhere outside Washington or Ottawa after Canada’s new government chief gets back from a' London conference with British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan. The aim is to smooth over dif-, ferences in Canadian-American policies which developed under Pearson’s predecessor, Conservative John Diefenbaker. JFK Turns Tour Guide for labor Leaders Unit WASHINGTON. (UPI) - Presi-| dent Kennedy, acting as tys own White House guide, yesterday | took a group of labor leaders on: a tour of the executive mansion's! private living quarters. ! Following a lunch honoring 32 union executives, Kennedy led! them through the second floor I ' provided a commentary for each room. i [ ALUMINUM PATIO ANY $IZE UP TO and INCLUDING GIANT 8 FT. x 20 FT. FREE INSTALLATION Larger Jobs Proportionately Priced • Always Cool • Adds Beauty to Your Home •100% Rustproof • Pay Pennies a Day Call now ... FREE Hene Demonstration No Obligation HE 4-4507 STERLING ENCLOSURE Patio Division WKC’S WAREHOUSE, 20 W. ALLEY ST. (Rear of Pike Street A&P Store) OPEN THURS. FRI. MON. NIGHTS til 9 WKC’S TEMPORARY LOCATION 144 N. Saginaw Street THE PbSTljAC PRESS, THURSDAY, APRIL 25,1963 V T-f. A—11 iQifx/f So/ons Accuse U.S. Marshals p JACKSON, Miss. (AP)-A Mississippi legislative committee has apcpsed U.S. marshals of brutality in connection with desegregation ribbing at the University of Missis- sippi. The Justice Department’!, prompt denial accused the committee of manufacturing and distorting facts.' The Mississippi legislative re- v jp B UNLUCKY BREAKS — You may think seven is a lucky ^timber, but these youngsters, both 7, figure this is their un--Jueky year. Mike Cass (foreground), and Joe Knight are school ^Bhums and occupy the same'hospital room in Coffeyville, Kan., «f«|rltb identical breaks in their right legs. port; released Wednesday, said the findings were based , on the y of 90 sworn witnesses. The report charged mistreatment of persons arrested during rioting fall after a Negro student, es H. Meredith, arrived on the campus at Oxford. ~ 4(W% _ Neither the witnesses nor the persbns allegedly mistreated we identified. > j* ★ ■ ★ * The Justice Department said, Washington that the report was an untruthful dompnent containing facts “distortedor ignored and incidents manufactured.” In Montgomery, Ala., Atty. Gem Robert F. Kennedy described the legislative report as “inadequate and incomplete.” ★ * * The Justice Department said none of the alleged brutalities had been reported by newsmen on the scene. Kennedy said the committee should have questioned the reporters and some of the marshals. The report, the first of three installments, said 556 marshals carried out a' systematic pattern of brutality toward prisoners, clubbing, manhandling and torturing them. • ★ ★ . * The committee said between 100 and 150 persons ranging in age from 12 to more than 60 were imprisoned in a garage near the campus. The report added: “AH persons, regardless of age or physical condition, were forced to sit on the concrete slab for periods up . to 20 hours, with knees drawn up Joward 1 their chins, their hands clasped around their knees, their* eyes to the front, without turning their heads or speaking to anyone. 'This was planned and executed as physical torture.” ; The'report Said between 100 and 150 prisoners were kept in a base- ment room 17 by 40 feet in the university’s administration building. • 'The marshals wore gas masks but none were given the . captives who suffered severely from the presence of tear gas during a large portion of the time they were held in this basement as much as 18 hours.,” the report I away as Lor Angeles and that said. , ’ sonhe were armed with shotguns, In its reply, the Justice Depart-rifles, knives, clubs' and black-ment said of 350 marshals caught jacks. ■ in the rioting, 180 were injured, * it 27 of them by gunfire. ^legislative committee did , The department added that not say when it would release the about 300 persons had been taken | other two installments of its re- V into custody from places as far port. ' Sale! For Girls’ 7 to 14. w rainwear sets Rain Coats with Umbrellas Charge It All-weather cotton poplin coats with Scotchgard (R) Brand stain repeller. Reverses to cotton print ... for longer wear. Complete with matching— umbrella. Choose beige or green in sizes 7 to 14. Reversible Coats reg. $8.98 chsi Riiincoslg with rayon velvet collar. Solid beige reverses to coordinating print. In sizes 7 to 14 Save $1.99 at Sears! Girls’ 7-U Depl., Second Floor Another Outstanding Sears Pays Value •»Last 2 Days |Shop ’til 9 2 Ionite, Fri, ^Saturday! Whether you go near the water or not... your glamour rating looms in these eye-catching two piece sets. Pick them up today in several of their wonderful bold brash colors and designs. All are cool cottons, Sizes 10 to 18. Don’t miss out on these valuesr Icrdi**’ H.crdy-fo-W.ar, Second Floor Charmode Cuff-Top zip girdles 777 $9.98 4 , Charge It Rayon, cotton satin front panel well boned. 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Room W/Pad 119.80 Regular $918 DuPont 501* NYLON 12-Ft. and 15-Ft. Widths Luxurious; resilient all - nylon pile'in five decorative colors. Designed for rugged, durability-wind lasting beauty. ,*DuPon1i. Certification Mark. 20-Sq.Yds. INSTALLED 169.80 FREE Shop At # Cut to Home seme* First Quality Carpets No Seconds from Sears Any Size Early! Large Color Selection Buy All You Want Reg. $1018 Broadloom Reg. *15i> “Best” WOOL Carpet WOOL Wilton 12-Ft. and 15-Ft. M w,dth8 i s-; yI 2 1199 Widths JLJLSq. Yd. With 40-Oc. Rubberized Pad With 40-Oz. Rubberized Pad Attractive, easy-care wool pile 1 carpeting in five room enhanc-1 ing colors. Rubberized padding I adds underfoot comfort. Moth-I proof, non-allergenic. Rugged deeply interwoven carpet, practical as well as luxurious, Attractive pattern in assorted decoratjve colors. Buy. now — save! I ,30-Sq. Yds. W/Pad 239.70 See Samples in Your Home Sale- Price FREE Measuring Reg. *5499 Axminster 9xl2-ft. Rugs 428? Each Choice of Assorted Colors Enhance your room decor and add underfoot comfort with a 9xl2-ft. axminster rug. Choose from harmonizing colors. SAVE $12,111 $1.29 Vinyl Linoleum, sq. yd. 88c SAVE $20! LAST 2 DAYS! Kenmore Two-Speed vacuum cleaners 5988 NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan Powerful 1H-HP (input) motor is packed with cleaning power.-Only 13 pounds light. Tools travel with you on self-storing detachable rack. Tip-toe on-off switch. High-impact fibergla* case is practically indestructible. King size 300-cu. in. throwaway bag. Vinyl wrap-around bumper, luggage-type handle. Two-tone case. Hurry in! Vacuum Dapl„ S.an Main Fleer 'marring easier* Oh tulrs or anywhere. So light you rat carry glldo over floors, rugs Thera's no loss ol power, and clean. Only 13 lbs. "Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back** SEARS f Downtown Pontiac * Phone FE 34171 :,v said, provided definitive evidence tiiat optimum use of, fluoride in community water creates a »dev cided margin of safety against mottling — Which involves stains or spots on teeth. WASHINGTON WV-The National Institute of Health (NfHy says it has evidence that fluoride in a community’s potable water provides a margin of safety against mottling of children’s teeth. The NIH told a House appro- Republican lidn’t think , THE STYLE CORNER OF PONTIAC j 1 “Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back” SEARS Downtown Pontiac Phone Ffi 5-4I7f THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, APHit 25, 1963 Women Vo^rs1^<,,,ms G0^) Leader List Expenses on New-Con The League of Women Voters (LWV)1 of Michigan spent $4.-259.49 in its campaign for approval of the new state constitution in the April ! election.. The Oakland County Non-Parti-■ san Committee for the New Constitution a?NC) spent $2,327.71 in Its campaign efforts on behalf of the document. 1 Both figures were given in campaign expense vouchers filed by Monday with the Oakland County clerk, as required by state law.' The LWV statement covering expenses throughout the state, eluding those of 35 local chapters, was filed here because the treasurer of the state LWV, Laura M. Belz, lives in Pontiac. WASHINGTON (AP) - Senate Republican Leader Everett Dirksen, of Illinois said yesterday grassroots, reports indicate country is not sold on a tax cut' that will boost the deficit.' The League’s efforts climaxed a long battle that began in 1955 to bring Michigan a revised con stitution. » Vote tabulations showed the i document winning by a narrow 7,829-vote margin, but the result has not yet been certified by the State Board of Canvassers and faces a recount demand by the Democratic party. The LWV’d expense statement said its funds came from individual contributors who accounted for $392.30 and from its regular operating budget supported by inember dues and contributions. Shutting the door on the Navy dirigible hangar at Lakehurst, N.J., Naval Air Station is no minor task. It is 250 feet wide and 120 feet high. Dirkseh Said in an interview his own soundings and those of colleagues during Congress’ Easter vacation turned up strong opposi-to President Kennedy’ spending proposals. He added that GOP member? found the voters’ attention primarily is riveted on the situation in Cuba and on menacing developments in Laos. There is. “no enthusiast at all’’ for Kennedy’s domestic proposals, Dirksen said. ifornia, the deputy leader, replied he there was anything Nixon’s proposals. He was reflecting “the uneasiness of the American people “with the continued presence in Cuba of a Communist ideology.” Dirksen said, he couldn’t agree with Rep. Hale Boggs, D-La., House Democratic whip, who said after a White House conference of party leaders with Kennedy Tuesday that an upturn in the economy. increasing chances for a tax reduction because of the prospect that the deficit will be smaller than predicted. ’ The Oakland County Republican party spent $13,230.83 in the spring oampaign while taking in a total of $18,720.64 in contributions, according to its statement. "“Cuba is a live issue and it is' not going to die down,” he said. ‘The people also are worried about the situation in Laos which has brought the 7th Fleet into position for action.” fjie Cuban issue was aired in the Senate Tuesday when Sen’. Wayne Morse, D-Ore., accused former Vic? President Richard M. Nixon of making a “war monger-ing speech” to the' American Society of .Newspaper Editors here last week: Nixon proposed then that Kennedy unleash refugees for hit-and-run attacks on the island. NEW TROY BANK - Construction of a $225,000 building to replace the present Troy National Bank at Maple and Liyernois roads will begin May 1, it was announced today. De- signed by Clifford Wrightf & Associates of Detroit, the three-level facility will be constructed by Kitchen Building Co. of Detroit. ivw a uuuac appur priations subcommittee, at a closed-door hearing that it reached its conclusions after a survey in Grand Rapids, Mich., Where fluoride has been used for 16 years. The transcript of the hearing was made public today. In 1961, the NIH researchers said, 822 students in Grand Rapids who had used fluoridated water since birth were examined. The examinations, the report igainst stains Pals Whip Up Presenf for Leader of Senate MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP)-fAs assistant floor leader in the Alabama Senate, Sen. Emmett Open is known as the whip. His colleagues, with all the,^formality .they could muster, gave him a present Tuesday symbolic of his official status — a 7-foot whip. » Morse said that the open support for such attacks could only lead to massive U.S.. military involvement. Sen. Thomas H, Kuchel of Cal- Feel as cool as you look in Hart Schaffner & Marx "Summer Lights” Viracle Suits Iridescent lights'sparkle frostily through cool colors in HS&M’s "Summer Lights” collection of, Viracle * kuits. These weigh-less wonders are 45% fine worsted and 55% Dacron' polyester, a carefree blend that sheds wrinkles but holds a press. HS&M "total lightness” tailoring takes naturally to trim, flattering lihes. Come in and give "Summer Lights” a cool appraisal. $79.95 7)ic!c2xisan& WE PAY YOUR PARKING , SAGINAW at LAWRENCE Open Monday and FridayrNight$ Until 9 P.M. BIRMINGHAM-272 W. Maple Open Thursday and Friday Nights.Until 9 P.M, Satie Ends Saturday A Sale As Grlat As 'encinfi Perry St. Its Name REDUCED *22! Sears Own David Bradley 3l/2 H.P. Roto Spaders 12299 Regularly at $144.99! Steel Chisel Point Tines Sjtnrdy 5x7-foot Metal Buildings NO MONEYDOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan Fine buy for homeowners with fairlyrarge garden areas, whether hard or mellow soil. The smooth-running Craftsman 4-cycle engine gives you plenty of power to dig a 26-in. wide strip a full 10-inches deep. Times are made of hardened steel, 12>in. in diameter. Fast-digging pick points. Both clutch and throttle controls are conveniently located on adjustable fold-over handles. Wind-up starter. no Money down On Sean K*»y Payment Plan Smartly designed building - ‘ inches high. Double door*. ’ * 1 with New Store Hrs.j NO MONEY DOWN on Sears 'Easy Payment Plan Regularly $92.99 Recoil Starter Lawn Sprinklers Oscillating-Type 949 Charge It Reg. $10.99 Covert 2400-aq. ft. New no-paute action avoid* end-of-cycle-puddle*. Craftsman. Craftsman 30-In., 7%-bu. Lawn Sweeper 5 to 7 times faster than, hand Reg. 188.99 raking. 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Reg. $29.99 9-inch Tilting-Arbor Craftsman Bench Saws Regularly nt $85.99 Make* 3-lneh deep out NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan Single handwheel controls blade height and tilt. Motor rides horizontally when blade is tilted. Pre-tensioned controls hold elevation and tilt getting, which is,easily read on indicator. Buy now — save! Park FREE Downtown In All City Metered Lots! ' $2.98 Shears Only Charge It 6-ln. blade has floating action for fast opora- i Adjustable $3.98 Edgers O.I, 3“ Charge It rSSfgg? Cut! clean 1-in. hclow walk and up to 4 inclicit Dual-Wlietl, Craftsman Rotaries with No-pull Starter Regularly at $64,991' 2%-lIP, 4-eyele engine 24-in. Easy-effort Riding Mowers Reg. $169.99 149" E*ee*tart, no-pull starter. Mows smoothly. Rugged 4- eyele engine. Save nowl NO MONEY DOWN on Scars Easy Payment Plan ; Here’s a quality-built 18-inch mower, with Crafty man Ezee-start engine. 4-position engine-control on handle for choke, fast, slow, off... no stooping. Adi justs to cut from lVfc to 3% inches. Save! .. $10 Grass Catcher • Hardware Dept., Main Da»«ment $ALE."*W ENDS ^ SATURDAY! SAVE j NOW! ^U TIME SERVICE GUARANTEE If tiro fuili during die monthly luonnteo period, wo will, et our option, either ro> pair it without coit or in exchange for the old tire, give you a new tire or a refund, charging only for the period of ownerthip. All adfuatmenti made hy retail atom are Prorated at the regular retail price plua ederal Excise Tax, lew trade-in, at the time of return. THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, APRIL 25, 1963 A—-13 President Kennedy's News Conference P PIMP I P!JP WASHINGTON—President Ken-|discussions wouldn’t be Useful, fledy has some sunny times, when but at another point said unleash-.ihinffo m | “ing the exiles “cannot do thejob.” ★ •, ★ ★ He could have been asked to explain in some detail, about the arrangements for the prisoner swap and if anything more than just the exchange lay behind it. things are looking .Wednesday’s news conference wasn’t one of them. " Things were looking rather down in his answers ,to die main questions asked him about foreign affairs. It was only ^MARLOW on domestic problems that he showed any optimism-*• But three very important events since Kennedy’s last meeting with hewsmen April 3 didn’t come up at Wednesday’s session: ^ The steel industry raised prices, with Kennedy’s consent; the Ktomic submarine Thresher sank with 120 men aboard; and the reported inclusion of three Central Intelligence Agents in this week’s a#ap of Cuban and U.S. prisoners: four Cubans for 27 Americans. - No one at the news conference tsked the President anything about the steel price increase and foe mystery of the sunken Thresher wasn’t mentioned at INDIRECT QUERY ; He was asked only indirectly about the prisoner swap, and in this way: Now that the Americans have been released, what will Ameri-can policy be toward letting Cuban exiles in this country I ime their hit-and-run raids on iba? Kennedy brushed it off. He said Sun Cut Solons Don't Limit Beauty Aids .WASHINGTON (AP)—Senators Were advised-today not to try to Standardize women, their per-fomes or their cosmetics. * . ★ ★ ★ ’ * *‘You can as easily standardize lit color, the shape or the size m$ lady’s hat as you can suc-eessfully standardize the package Si'which she will buy her favorite fragrances, and make-up,” said Neva Bradley. “Please, gentlemen,” she 'added, “allow us ladies our fanciful whim. It Is good for ns and’ It is good' for yon, too.” Miss Bradley was making an appeal to leave the cosmetic and toilet preparations industry out of an administration-backed bill to tighten federal regulation of the packaging and labeling of ‘ foods and household goods. Her statement was offered to the Senate Antitrust subcommittee on behalf of Cosmetic Career Women, Inc., an organization of women executives in the cosmetic and toilet preparations Industry. “Cosmetics are of glamorous stuff,” she said. “To specify a standard container, to stultify the label with unnecessary conformance to utilitarian uniformity would destroy the glamour, 'precipitate the whim and dissipate the dream. “As a practical matter,” she continued, “you cannot equate cosmetic products by weight, container size, or ‘servings’. In one branded product a little dab will <|o; in another you would want to lavish it, splash it or spill it $i.” ★ ★ w Miss Bradley said that cosmetics are personal products and that before they could be effectively standardized, "you would have to standardize women, their patterns of preference and their individual beauty problems.” Nix Payments Ceiling SPRINGFIELD, 111. (UPI) -The Illinois House has voted down a bill to put ceilings on payments to public aid recipients: HEARING AID SALESMEN EXPERIENCED Ixctptlontl Oppsrtunltlet With ZENITH tha leader, for right man or men. AT THE PRESENT TIME Wl HAVE OPENINGS FOR SALESMEN AND OFFICE MANAGER. CALL D. F. BIFANO WO 2-2952 The President was dim on hopes for a nuclear test ban agreement with Russia, indicated no interest a summit meeting with Premier Khrushchev or in a meeting with French President Charles de Gaulle at this time. ★' *’ ★ He was vague on hopes for get- ting rid of Castro or finding peace| in Laos. ' In a limited way -he Was optimistic about what Congress will do] to his programs; he thinks money spent on space is worthwhile; and he thinks the economy is growing stronger. Nuclear test ban—he ■ wasn’t very “sanguine” about getting Khrushchev to agree to one this spring, He said “we fpel time is running out.” fr; * ★ '• ★ “If we fail in Laos,” he said, ;I would think the prospects for accords on matters which may be geographically closer to us would be substantially lessened.’’ , A summit meeting vfith Khrushchev—Kennedy said none is planned and “it doesn’t seem- to me it would be useful unless we were hi agreement upon a test ban, which we are not now.” Castro—Wednesday, as before, Kenned)/ gave no indication this country' intends to do any more than it is doing now to get arid of the Communist dictator, And what nuclear .... into confusion by banning Britain from the Common Market and insists on developing his own it is doing now isn’t getting rid ' him. ;t of What Kennedy said in effect was: If the United States .and De Gaulle—Kennedy showed no'France have anything to discuss, enthusiasm for a meeting with let their foreign ministers discuss the Frenchman who tforew the Al-lit.________ Mileage Lon NYLON TIRES 10” 21-Month Guarantee 6.70x15 Tube-Type Blackball NO TRADE-IN REQUIRED! 15-inch Tube-Type Blackballs 6.70x15.............. plus tax 10.77 7.10x15.............. plus tax 13.77 7.60x15 ..............plus tax 15.77 14 or 15-inch Tubeless Blackballs 6.70x15 or 7.50x14.....plus tax 13.77 7.10x15 or 8.00x14....plus tax 15.77 7,60x15............... plus tax 17.77 WHITEWALLS ONLY ... 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What caused thO organism to become virulent roemains a medical mystery. ■ Two patients died and a third suffered an infection at the hospital. They had one thing in common-each had undergone an operation for a broken thigh-bone. Each was operated on by a different surgeon, and two different operating rooms were used. An investigation was ordered, land the hospital’s operating rooms were closed. Dr. Robert Albrecht, director of the state health department’s office of epidemiology, said Wednesday .night the investigation showed the deaths were caused by the common enterococcus organism, which lives in the intestinal tract. Hospital Supt. Alex E. Norton said the investigation will continue but thai the operating rooms will reopen Friday. “All precautions have been taken,” h^said. Crime Can Be Easy By DR- GEORGE W. CRANE CASE P-420: Dro n n a G., aged 18, is a college coed., . ‘JBut; Dr. Crane,” she began? “I don’t know how tot carry on an,interesting con- versation. L “Last Week X dated a very attractive boy. But he actually told me I was too tongue - tied. “So what -can I do to be-aJIHP come an in-DR. CRANE teresting conversationalist”? Psychology has developed several, simple recipes by which you girls can make a boy feel wonderful. And if you'can help him over the awkward pauses of the first few minutes oh your date, and * the n get him launched into easy conversation, he usually will feel happy. f Then some of his joy will splash over upon you until you become painted in a much more charming hue. Clever conversational skill thus keeps ’em coming back for future dates, far more than does 'a classy chassis! You ^attractive physical beauty may attract a man’s attention, but what produces a wedding ring is a girl’s ability to hold a boy’s interest. If a boy’s first attempt at conversation bogs down and a pause develops, you girls should use t h i s five-word formula. It reads: “How interesting! Tell me more!” He will expand happily at your compliment, plus your request for more information, whether it be about football, -his hobbies or space ships. “Yes, Dr. Crane,” Donna may inquire, “but suppose he doesn’t say anything except ’Hi’ When he first arrives. “How can I get him started on any topic long enough to •justify using your five-word recipe?” If you have a clam-like boy friend, you can get him launched upon easy conversation by using the key letters H-E-L-P of *my ^short-form strategy. • “H” stands for hobbies, so ask him if he ever collected birds’ eggs, bottle caps, matches, old coins, stamps, etc. He will usually get launched upon conversation, after which you can use that . five-word strategy: “How interesting!;Tell me more!” ' ; • ' But if he runs out of conversational ammunition after «you have tried the letter “H”, then shift to. “E", which stands for entertainment. It includes sporting events, movies, dances, etc.Y The letter “L” refers to literature and the “P” to politics. “■ • - And, when you can’t think of anything else with which to break a pause, then size up your companion quickly nrYii for 8om